Posted by
CmdrTaco
on from the you-can-do-it dept.
Rantastic writes "In a recent interview with Wired Magazine, Microsoft Security Program Manager Stephen Toulouse, when asked about their now 2 year old focus on security, comments "it's more of a 10-year timeline." He also reveals that he runs Firefox."
Missing: Interview
by
RobertB-DC
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· Score: 5, Insightful
What sort of "interview" only includes four loaded questions? Wired gets hold of the Microsoft "security program manager", and these are all the questions they ask? I'm no M$ fanboy (though I must admit I make a living writing programs for Windows), but surely they can do better than this obvious hatchet job:
WIRED: It's been more than a month since the first news of Download.Ject, and you still haven't issued a real fix for Internet Explorer. How long is it going to take?
In other words: So, when will you stop beating your wife?
Meanwhile, Firefox and Opera look awfully appealing.
Ok, the guy really stepped in it here when he plugged Firefox (though I'm an Opera fan, myself).
What about removing capabilities from IE to beef up security?
You think you'll get him to promise to cut off "capability"-dependent programs (and their programmers) at the knees?
Seems like you're fighting a losing battle.
Objection: counsel is badgering the witness. The only appropriate answer would probably be, "Yes, we are, f*** you very much."
-- Stressed? Me?
Of course not.
Stress is what a rubber band feels before it breaks, silly.
Re:Missing: Interview
by
MrMr
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· Score: 5, Insightful
In other words: So, when will you stop beating your wife? Except that to make the analogy complete, you should add that in this case the question is put to somebody who is actually busy beating his wife...
Objection: counsel is badgering the witness Overruled, Wired reporters are not counsel but more like prosecution, and this guy is not a witness but a suspect.
Re:Missing: Interview
by
sjames
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· Score: 4, Insightful
In other words: So, when will you stop beating your wife?
Not really, no. The question was about a specific hole who's existance is not in dispute. It makes no unwarranted assumptions and doesn't ask him to make any new admissions in answering. Unless you mean to imply that the question might cause him to accidentally admit to doing his job?
You think you'll get him to promise to cut off "capability"-dependent programs (and their programmers) at the knees?
Perhaps not, but it's a fair question. Many people are of the opinion that the feature shouldn't have been there in the first place (for security reasons). It wouldn't be the first time MS has given customers a choice between break feature X or be insecure.
Objection: counsel is badgering the witness. The only appropriate answer would probably be, "Yes, we are, f*** you very much."
Perhaps, but since MS has a history of being less than forthcoming on the witness stand (literally as well as fuguratively), additional lattitude in questioning may be given.
Sounds like an acknowledgment of the extended timeline for something like Palladium/Trusted Computing. I've been curious to hear more about when and where that's actually going to show up.
He runs Firefox, duh!?
by
garcia
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· Score: 4, Insightful
He also reveals that he runs Firefox.
If you were working in the X divison of a company wouldn't YOU be using a competitors program so that you could know what they were doing to make their side better? I know I would.
In fact, I would be completely disappointed if he DIDN'T run Firefox.
Reading between the lines
by
El
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· Score: 5, Funny
"it's more of a 10-year timeline... but my stock options will be fully vested in 5 years, so I'll be long gone before the shit hits the fan on security still not being fixed!"
--
"Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney
I dont know if he really *uses* firefox...
by
angst7
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· Score: 4, Interesting
The context made it seem more like he saw an opportunity to mention a flaw in the competing product.
Re:I dont know if he really *uses* firefox...
by
Aneurysm9
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· Score: 4, Insightful
Exactly. When was this interview done that he had just installed the shell exploit fix that morning? Besides, that's a fix for a *Windows* problem and he should be more concerned with fixing it than making hay about someone else's patch for their problem.
-- There was Cowboy Neal at the wheel of a bus to never-ever land.
Re:Download.Ject -- CORRECTION
by
romper
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· Score: 5, Informative
Sorry to reply to my own post, but figured I should before the flamethrowers start in.
Download.Ject information is actually here. The exploit referred to above is actually the "what a drag" exploit. Still pretty scary if you ask me.
When will Open Source advocates realize that it's just this sort of behind-the-times technological gaffe that will keep Linux in single-digit marketshare forever?;)
-- I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate.
Fat lot of good it will do...
by
darth_MALL
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· Score: 5, Funny
According to the Mayan Calendar We'll only get a year to enjoy it!
Re:Fat lot of good it will do...
by
MooseByte
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· Score: 4, Funny
"According to the Mayan Calendar We'll only get a year to enjoy it!"
We won't even get there. I hesitate to instigate a panic, but... MY calendar runs out on Dec 31 of THIS YEAR! AAAIEEEEEE!
No Time Toulouse
by
Otis2222222
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· Score: 5, Funny
The first thing I thought of when I saw the guy's name. Still cracks me up everytime I see it. Am I the only one that thought of this sketch?
Move the timeline out indefinately...
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 4, Funny
If everyone is spreading viruses, it ceases to be a stigma, and becomes the accepted norm. Think of it this way:
If everyone had AIDS, you wouldn't have to be all that concerned about STDs now, would you?
New Apple add: iMac, its like a computer with a condom!
Security Update
by
MikeMacK
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· Score: 5, Insightful
Just this morning I had to install an update to Firefox to block a flaw that would've allowed an attacker to run a program on my system.
But that's just it, at least he had an update to install, MS doesn't release security updates as quickly as it needs too, as the first question mentioned.
Actually, the exploit only worked on Windows Machines. Firefox for Linux, MacOS etc was not affected. It had more to do with native Windows security than it had to do with Firefox.
-- Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
They left the spinning to Slashdot. RTFA. The interviewee says:
It's not a switch that can be flipped. Software written by humans will always contain errors. We're fundamentally changing the way things operate, to help to make software more resistant to attacks. We're two and a half years down a much longer road; it's more of a 10-year timeline.
What me meant is that Microsoft is completely reworking the way their browser operates -- not just toughening a few system calls here and there. A total reconsideration of how a browser should be designed.
The Slashdot editors took that and spit out "AHAHA M$IE INSEKURE UNTIL 2011! LOL@GATES"
Comment removed
by
account_deleted
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· Score: 4, Interesting
Comment removed based on user account deletion
What?? 100% known secure isn't possible.
by
DunbarTheInept
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· Score: 4, Insightful
What in the blazes does it mean for something to finally be "secure"?? It's not as if it's actually an achievable goal, and it's not as if you'd have a way to detect when you'd achieved it even if it was achievable.
The 100% secure line is an asymptote. You can get fractionally closer to it, but never ever actually achieve it.
--
Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.
You may think that its funny that firefox doesn't support Download.Ject technology, but for the rest of us in the real world, how can we offer it as an alternative to explorer? My PHB will just say "Ignignot, I like this FireFox thing you have working on my computer. But I've read in the Wall Street Journal that it doesn't support Download.Ject. I'm afraid we simply can't afford to make this switch."
We need this feature fixed now if not sooner, otherwise we're all going to be stuck using this insecure MS offering!
When will there ever be a feature complete open source internet explorer??
-- I submitted this story last night, and it didn't get posted.
To be fair...
by
artemis67
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· Score: 5, Insightful
he didn't say that FireFox was his primary browser, he just said that he had to patch it because of a vulnerability.
I would hope that as a program manager he would have a copy of each of the competing browsers on his system, so that he can steal... ah, borrow, ideas from them.
In case you're wondering... why?
by
Penguinoflight
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· Score: 4, Insightful
First, someone posted above, the analogy between windows security fix, and Slashdot's terrible "IT" theme.
Second, the idea that an MS head is using firefox is hardly surprising, it's much more at issue that he's willing to admit it to Wired, and doesn't even seem to mind that open source is a better alternative.
Microsoft has had a history of using open source projects, most famously with qmail+unix on their hotmail, but even branching to the MSN gaming zone, etc. It's really not too surprising, considering a lot of the unix foundation implemented in their NT-XP series.
--
"And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World" 1 John 4:14
Among other browsers, I'm sure!
by
addie
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· Score: 5, Insightful
He also reveals that he runs Firefox
Indeed, parent post is correct. Besides, the article doesn't say that he uses FireFox exclusively by any means. In fact he only mentions FireFox to prove that all browsers are susceptible to attacks.. Here's hoping he also uses NS, Opera, Safari, and whatever browser he can to do testing and research.
Yet more spin by/. zealots who don't take the article at face value.
Re:Download.Ject
by
Jim_Maryland
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· Score: 4, Informative
If I'm not mistaken, XP SP2 includes the work around which changes a registry entry related to the exploit. XP SP2 doesn't really fix this particular problem but disables the functionality that is being exploited. In a way, users aren't at risk, but if you rely on that functionality, well your out of luck for now or you must run with the risk.
What kind of pathetic headline is that? When did MS say "MS not expected secure until 2011"?!?! This is called sensationalist GARBAGE, people! Stop putting this swill up as headline material.
Having someone say "it's more of a 10-year timeline" does not equate to "MS not expected secure until 2011"...much less "MS says" 2011. The phrase "more of a..." connotes a generality. The headline is pure, conjured specificity.
Crap like this makes me become seriously disenchanted with Slashdot.
Crap like this makes me become seriously disenchanted with Slashdot.
Really?
It keeps me coming back for more...
just like Big Macs and nicotine.
Even XP SP2 is easy to tamper with
by
mslinux
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· Score: 5, Informative
Change the following registry value to 4 and the new "Windows Security Center" will stop working upon reboot... it runs as a service that any admin user can kill. Did I mention that by default all XP users are admin;)
Also, here's a Python script that will automatically kill the new "Windows Firewall" in to XP Service Pack 2. You can bet your ass that hackers are already tampering with this. Click a URL and bam... the firewall goes down.
This is just two example of what MS does to "secure" their systems. God help us all.
What is unfair here?
by
revscat
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· Score: 4, Informative
A) A Microsoft representative said that it will take an estimated 11 years to fully secure Windows
B) Slashdot reports this
What spinning or unfair editing took place here? Your pullquote doesn't seem to show anything unfair. Yes, they are reworking key system components. But that still doesn't change the fact that Windows is so insecure that it will, by their own admission, take over 10 years to fix it. That's pretty important.
Re:What is unfair here?
by
danheskett
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· Score: 5, Insightful
What spinning or unfair editing took place here?
No, the Microsoft guy said that the security goals set forth are not short term goals, but rather, long terms goals, aka 10 years.
The headline of the Slashdot article makes it seems like he said flat out that Windows will be insecure for 10 years. Which isn't true, and which isn't what he said.
At some point people on Slashdot are going to have to come to grips with the fact that there are levels of security. MS is in the middle of a big push to change how they themselves and more importantly their customers think about security.
It's a non-trivial thing. Windows developers haven't been thinking about security until recently. It's been a non-issue until the world and MS made it one.
Getting the core of Microsoft software, applications, services and servers up to date, as well as creating tools that forcefully prod developers into coding effectively and securely is the real big goal of Microsoft's security plan.
Now look at this very short interview. The original question was:
We asked Stephen Toulouse, Microsoft's security program manager, if Redmond is fighting a war it can't win.
That's clearly the question he is responding to in the final "question": "Seems like you're fighting a losing battle.".
Rethink it in light of that question. Security isn't a start at X, arrive at Y, and you are done thing. Any developer knows that.
MS has done the basic things they never did before: disable services by default, enforce passwords, use least privelage practices, and the like. That's step 1. They've gone a head and prodded developers to be more conscious of security problems - that's step 2. They've updated thier own software to be much more resilent to attack. This isn't about just buffer overruns and whatnot. It's about cross-site scripting, phishing, and the like. It's about redesigning things to be secure by default.
Getting everyone in the Windows world to that point is the stated goal of the MS security initiative. The Slashdot headline made it seem like a MS rep said point blank that to make Windows secure would take until 2011. And that is pretty clear.
When the question "Seems like you're fighting a losing battle" was posed the MS guy responded by saying "'s not a switch that can be flipped. Software written by humans will always contain errors. We're fundamentally changing the way things operate, to help to make software more resistant to attacks. We're two and a half years down a much longer road; it's more of a 10-year timeline."
Finally,as an FYI. The rate of security flaws in Windows itself isn't terribly bad. Windows XP is a decent product, and it's not terribly hard to harden. Take a Windows XP box, turn on auto-updates, run FireFox, and be done with it.
Re:Firing offense?
by
brickbat
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· Score: 5, Informative
This really needs to be modded down, as it's not only not insightful, it demonstrates a total lack of comprehension of Toulouse's response.
He did not say he didn't use IE. He simply mentioned needing to install a security update of Firefox. Yes, Virginia, there are other browsers that have security flaws other than IE. That doesn't make them better or worse, it just illustrates that the problem isn't isolated to Microsoft.
And I suspect that in performing his job duties, he needs to be familiar with a wide array of browser technologies, not just IE.
It is likely that this is spin. When someone has a job that depends on the future security of a product that is likely next to impossible to make secure without a complete rewrite, what can he do? He has limited budjet, and unrealistic goals. So he makes a 10 year plan, saying that they will be secure in 10 years. He shows progress to his boss, and his boss is happy. He gets to keep his job.
Then, 2 years down the line, he revises his 10 year plan to expire in another 10 years - as long as the deadline is far enough away, he keeps his job, he puts food on the table, and the PR bunnies have something to hop about. This happens all the time in business, particularly publicly held companies. I would be very sceptical about any future Microsoft promises about security.
-- I submitted this story last night, and it didn't get posted.
Re:Bash away...
by
BenjiPenguin
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· Score: 5, Insightful
"Microsoft is partly to blame, but they're the biggest fish in the sea. Every 'fisherman' is out to get them. When Linux or Mac or Mozilla or whatever becomes the primary player, they will be found out to have just as many liabilities in the security department, I'm sure... They may get fixed quicker because of the relative smallness and open source attributes, but the bugs are there. Just no one is looking/caring too much. Yet."
Linux is already one of the biggest players in the server department, and that's where a majority of viruses and exploits are aimed at... I still don't see announcements for all these business running Linux servers being compromised.... The fact is, Linux is theoretically and in actual practice more stable and secure. Windows isn't.. A virus won't JUST affect your user account files in Windows... I think they're mostly to blame...
"
No... so, maybe we should just START to take a little blame for windows security problems. Stop running that cute screensaver your Aunt Matilda sent you. Don't go to webpages that advertise 'warez' and 'free 3leet mp3z!'"
People aren't that smart.
What the...?
by
Jugalator
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· Score: 4, Insightful
Since when did security become a goal you can achieve after a certain amount of time?
It's something you always need to keep an eye open for, and combat exploits whenever necessary. How can Microsoft say "it's more of a 10-year timeline". That statement alone makes me wonder how sane Microsoft's security program manager is. So Microsoft are going to dismantle their security team in 2011?
What would the Linux community think if Linus went out claiming that "we expect the Linux kernel to be secure in version 3.0"??
Anyone who takes software security seriously should understand that you can never expect a product to be secure after some period of time.
"Secure" is also relative and not at all an absolute term.
-- Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
Re:I security really that important?
by
hernyo
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· Score: 5, Insightful
This sounds like "death is good because it makes us appreciate life"...
Non-security is a thing we don't like, so of course we want to get rid of it.
Relying on IE-only functionality (as I assume this is) is a retarded thing to do anyway, with the extreme gain in marketshare that Firefox has seen recently. People who make that mistake deserve a good slapping, or at the very least, a reality check.
Regardless of what Microsoft and their fans may think, the browser wars are all started up again. Anyone who designs their site to be IE-only nowadays is just asking for trouble. Unfortunately, it's not exactly uncommon.
-- Quality, performance, value; you get only two, and you don't always get to pick.
Re:I security really that important?
by
dodgy_knickers
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· Score: 5, Insightful
"Has the horrendous security done anything other than support thousands of jobs and spawed a massive aftermarket security industry?"
By that logic, we should view terrorism as good for the economy since it creates jobs for the folks employed at the office of Homeland Security.
Think, real hard. What other effects came from from security flaws (in either case)? Anything bad? Anything at all?
Perhaps this is just crazy talk, but I submit that there are better ways to stimulate the economy.
-kev
Re:I security really that important?
by
mrchaotica
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· Score: 5, Insightful
Those thousands of jobs are just running on a treadmill and sucking resources from companies that do real work. If Windows was secure, all that capital and talent could be used for something better.
--
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
New Apple add: iMac, its like a computer with a condom!
New add for Linux:
Linux: you can't get infected unless you get laid.
Re:Download.Ject
by
aron_wallaker
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· Score: 4, Informative
I tried it on WinXP Pro (no SP2) IE 6.0.28 and it went through on the first try without even a warning from IE.
Re:Firing offense?
by
calethix
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· Score: 5, Insightful
That's what I'd like to know. The article summary makes it sound like he uses Firefox because he doesn't trust IE.
All I found in the article was: "Meanwhile, Firefox and Opera look awfully appealing.
Security is really an industry-wide problem. Just this morning I had to install an update to Firefox to block a flaw that would've allowed an attacker to run a program on my system."
That sounds more to me like he's trying to point out that other browsers can have vulnerabilities as well. He doesn't say anything about exclusively using Firefox. Maybe he just installed Firefox just to see what the competition is like.
Poor guy is really having to struggle...
by
argent
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· Score: 4, Informative
Poor guy is really having to struggle to say something that'll make his job look less hopeless. The "patch to Firefox" that he's talking about is actually a patch to a PNG library used by a lot of applications, not just Firefox.
On the other hand, he didn't say "Windows not secure until 2011", and I think his "10 year plan" is more of an acknowledgement of the magnitude of the problem than a hint as to Microsoft's timeline.
I wonder if he's even got the authority to deal with the real problems buried deep in the design of IE. If not, they can take 10 years or 100 years and still not get rid of "cross zone" attacks. I suspect only hope is that other browser developers will suddenly agree with microsoft that security zones based on the current location of a file is a much better idea than limiting the potential targets for an attack to just the application that's responsible for downloading and displaying an untrusted document. If that happens, then they'll REALLY be able to argue "everyone else has the same problem" and mean it.
Taht's not a FIX... That's a FUX
by
Foofoobar
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· Score: 4, Funny
That's not a fix, that's a FUX. It looks like a fix but if you percieve a FUX to be a FIX, you're bound to get FUXED.
Seriously though, they can't fix it without removing IE from the system. You can easily get around their FUX by using a shell call... which makes this bug even scarier.
-- This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
It's the fundamental APIs
by
msobkow
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· Score: 4, Interesting
The heavy use of anonymous pointers, multi-function entry points, and DLL initialization/release interactions create an absolute nightmare to maintain.
Even for a relatively small project, you have to spend a fair amount of time just getting code separated into mainline and DLL. Then you get the joy of dealing with the weirdities of the Windows variation on process interaction with DLLs.
I can't imagine any way of securing that spaghetti except to scrap the Win32 API and make the.Net framework the Windows programming layer. Then you can get rid of those holdover APIs from DOS-thunker days and replace the kernel with one that was designed for multi-user security.
You can be grateful Microsoft is finally taking security seriously if you like. I look back on 10-15 years of pager calls, system recoveries, and late projects because of bugs, many of which have never been fixed. My patience with their problems and excuses ended a long, long time ago.
Don't forget Microsoft has been around almost exactly as long as GNU.org. Linux is a pup compared to Windows, yet look how much faster that team addresses problems than the much larger team at Microsoft.
If Microsoft's market share begins hurting because of their security issues, they've no one else to blame but themselves. If the industry demands POSIX server APIs and Windows can't deliver, Microsoft has no one to blame but themselves -- the Cygwin team seems to have managed the task.
Microsoft and a lot of other companies need to get back to re-verifying their core business and refocus on producing marketable products and services. Times change, and last decade's sure winner is last year's end-of-life product. A little less focus on the stock market, and a little more on realistic business models and long-term viability.
-- I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
Simple to me means 'double click the installer, then type your password when it asks for it'.
--
I'm not wrong. You haven't thought about it hard enough.
Re:Bash away...
by
Kent+Recal
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· Score: 5, Insightful
Linux remote-root exploits just happen rarely and kernel exploits even more so.
But what excuse does the biggest software company in the world have to not fix the gaping security holes in their two most used and probably most sensitive applications, explorer and outlook? We are watching this weekly windows exploit drama not for months but for years now. It's getting really old and its not funny at all anymore.
The worms we have seen were pretty harmless in my book, I'm still waiting for the one that carries some more serious payload. Like wiping out all accessible drives (network volumes), saturating all network cards with malicious packets, stuff like that. MS probably needs that kind of wake up call but are they really that bone-headed to not see it coming?
Re:I security really that important?
by
EinarH
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· Score: 4, Interesting
Melius mori in libertate quam vivere in servitute.
Doubledge sword
by
superpulpsicle
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· Score: 5, Insightful
Linux will always be 1 step ahead in security.
MS will always be 1 step ahead in features.
Guess what, features sell. Maybe in the year 3000 things might be different.
Re:Doubledge sword
by
BasilBrush
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· Score: 4, Insightful
How can MS be 1 step ahead in features when they are struggling to put into Windows by 2006 what is already in OS X? How can MS be 1 step ahead in features when I.E. does less than Firefox?
MS is one step ahead in having off the shelf applications written for it. That's the reason why most people stick with it. The applications that they already have, and the applications that they forsee themselves wanting to run run on Windows. It's not because of features.
Re:Doubledge sword
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 4, Interesting
How can MS be 1 step ahead in features when they are struggling to put into Windows by 2006 what is already in OS X?
They aren't.
The only thing I can think of that you might be referring to is Avalon. And that is considerably more advanced than Quartz Extreme. Quartz Extreme is like the current Windows rendering engine on steroids - it does more in hardware, it does more fancy stuff, but at heart it's still 2D bitmap-based software rendering with some fancy anti-aliasing, alpha compositing, and Expose bolted on top. Avalon is fully vector-based and done entirely in hardware. You simply can't compare the two directly.
Re:Doubledge sword
by
Tanktalus
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· Score: 4, Insightful
How can MS be 1 step ahead in features when they are struggling to put into Windows by 2006 what is already in OS X? How can MS be 1 step ahead in features when I.E. does less than Firefox?
Us OS/2 guys always said the same thing about Windows - why wait for Windows95 when OS/2 had all its features, and stability as well? Obviously MS doesn't even need features to continue selling.
Re:Doubledge sword
by
mnmn
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· Score: 4, Insightful
I just cant bear NOT to reply to this.
Linux has more functionality than Windows. No question about it.
Answer these:
how many ports (cpu architectures) does windows run on?
is windows tcpip more featureful and flexible than windows?
which version of windows has more GUI features than the latest KDE or GNOME?
does windows or dos support more different hardware than linux? (I have one pentium3 sitting right here that crashes on the HLT instruction. I can only run Linux on it, and quite well.)
how many different ways can you install windows?
is windows' threads implementation the best in the market?
is windows memory management the best in the market?
show me the most secure windows, I'll show you 10 more oses more secure than that.
by a WIDE margin.
-- "Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you."
-Nim Chimpsky
Re:Doubledge sword
by
PocketPick
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· Score: 5, Interesting
Those are all nice features for some, but not features that will sell an operating system to Joe User. When a user boots up thier computer, they want three things:
-To Read Email
-To Use Office (or other word processing/spreadsheet/presentation application)
-To Surf the internet.
That's all. My grandmother doesn't care if KDE provides quick access to the console terminal, nice configuration of profiles or quick ways to make system level modifications. And she definitetly wouldn't care about ports or tcp-ip (even if she had a vague idea of what they were). In short, she would have no intention of touching these features in the first place even if they were present in Windows.
Your case of installation is another excellent example. Windows install methods are kept basic for the simple reason that even your most average user has to be able to perform it (and Microsoft knows it). Having a variety of installation methods and added complexity tends to scare people away from any product in general. Whether it's simply choosing 1 application from hundreds that you want to install or telling someone to setup partitions and swap space, they'll be terrified if you put too much in thier face.
Linux Distribution companies realize this, and are working hard to simplyfy thier installation methods. Based on what i've seen when I picked up SuSE 9.0 a while back, this is certainly true.
In time, people will come to become more computer literate, and perhaps these features will have some meaning. Till then though, it's not going to be all the fancy under-the-hood features that sell a product. It's going to be simplicty.
Re:Doubledge sword
by
Joe+U
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· Score: 5, Insightful
And now I'll answer as the average Joe User.
how many ports (cpu architectures) does windows run on?
One, the system I own. I don't care about the others. I have no need to, this is not a hobby, this is my computer.
is windows tcpip more featureful and flexible than windows?
It works with everything I have.
which version of windows has more GUI features than the latest KDE or GNOME?
Without editing files and getting complicated? 95/98/Me/2000/XP/NT 4
does windows or dos support more different hardware than linux? (I have one pentium3 sitting right here that crashes on the HLT instruction. I can only run Linux on it, and quite well.)
Your hardware is broken, you should fix it.
how many different ways can you install windows?
One, the way it installs on my system.
is windows' threads implementation the best in the market?
As far as I'm concerned it is.
is windows memory management the best in the market?
As far as I'm concerned it is.
show me the most secure windows, I'll show you 10 more oses more secure than that.
Strange, they all have BSD in their name.
Matter of proportion
by
gillbates
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· Score: 4, Insightful
The objection is not that Microsoft's software is insecure, but rather that their closest competition has at least two orders of magnitude fewer exploits and viruses than they.
If hundreds of exploits per month were discovered for Macs or Linux, your point would be valid. Problem is, the number of exploits available for all computers systems since the 50's is easily less than the number discovered in Windows in one year.
To make matters worse the rate at which exploits are being discovered is increasing, not decreasing, or even remaining stable. And this from a company making three billion dollars a month. How is it then, that a bunch of ragtag volunteers put together a more secure OS than a company which can spend a billion dollars a month on development?
Microsoft Windows, and the attendant problems it has experienced has brought shame on the entire profession. It isn't a matter of a few human errors here and there - Microsoft releases code with wanton disregard for the effects it will have on the user. You would expect more from a such a successful company, but apparently, Microsoft believes the professional standards followed by the rest of the industry simply do not apply to them.
And that, is why they get bashed. They dismiss the wisdom gained by years of computer science, and when their systems run rampant with bugs and security holes, they claim that such lofty goals as security and reliability are unattainable - in spite of the fact that their peers who did heed the lessons of computers science have managed to build such systems.
-- The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
Misleading statement.
by
halfabee
·
· Score: 5, Informative
From the article: "Security is really an industry-wide problem. Just this morning I had to install an update to Firefox to block a flaw that would've allowed an attacker to run a program on my system."
I presume that Toulouse was referring to the update that fixed the "shell:" exploit.... this was only a problem with Firefox on Windows machines, because the flaw is inherit in the OS, not in the Firefox browser.
True, security is an issue about which everyone in the industry should be concerned. Call a spade a spade, though... Microsoft is well behind the curve.
-- --
Halfabee
Re:Download.Ject
by
gad_zuki!
·
· Score: 4, Informative
Just tried it on a fresh SP2 install and it works. The kicker is even after I've closed IE I still can't delete the boom.exe file from startup because its being used by a different program. Oh well, might as well disarm it (yeah I know its a 0kb exe but what the hey) with msconfig.
The handful of sites that don't work well with Firefox/Moz is really a small price to pay for the added security especially in regards to drive-by spyware installs.
Actually, you're wrong.
by
transops.net
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· Score: 5, Informative
Your comment was:
"He doesn't "reveal" that he uses Firefox either. Nowhere in the article does it state such."
To quote TFA:
"Security is really an industry-wide problem. Just this morning I had to install an update to Firefox to block a flaw that would've allowed an attacker to run a program on my system."
Please RTFA before posting corrections to the comments of others. Thank you.
Re:Correction:
by
Macrobat
·
· Score: 4, Insightful
I write software that doesn't contain errors, every day, on systems which deal with far more data than the average MS app.
I find this hard to believe. Are you saying that you write software that is as complex as the usual MS app, and that it contains no errors whatsoever and has never had to be debugged? It seems like everyone from Knuth on down has written bugs in software when working on an application of non-trivial complexity, so I'm a little skeptical if that's your claim.
And the amount of data that an app processes is not the only measure of a program's complexity: does your program interoperate with a dozen others in a standard cut-and-paste manner; does it hide the complexity of operation from the end user so he or she can point and click and get things done; does it use an API so that software writers outside of your company can can write apps that interact with it; does your software run on multiple different hardware platforms; do you add new features to it when marketing surveys show people want it?
I'm not saying that all of those criteria are necessarily the best or most desirable (e.g., sometimes you want software that's only usable by industry professionals), but those are the constraints that Microsoft operates within, and they all increase the complexity of even the simplest-seeming of applications.
-- "Hardly used" will not fetch you a better price for your brain.
are apples the same as oranges?
by
way2trivial
·
· Score: 4, Insightful
I've got an idea, lets make a list pitting product A's strengths against Product B's weaknesses..
can your car go as fast as my bicycle?
can my sister pee farther than my uncle?
how many different programs can you burn dvd's with in linux?
how many linux computers can play doom 3?
I'm not playing favorites, just objecting to your biased list.
-- every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
Stephen Toulouse also admitted he is retiring in 2010...
-- www.globaltics.net
Political discussion for a new world
What sort of "interview" only includes four loaded questions? Wired gets hold of the Microsoft "security program manager", and these are all the questions they ask? I'm no M$ fanboy (though I must admit I make a living writing programs for Windows), but surely they can do better than this obvious hatchet job:
WIRED: It's been more than a month since the first news of Download.Ject, and you still haven't issued a real fix for Internet Explorer. How long is it going to take?
In other words: So, when will you stop beating your wife?
Meanwhile, Firefox and Opera look awfully appealing.
Ok, the guy really stepped in it here when he plugged Firefox (though I'm an Opera fan, myself).
What about removing capabilities from IE to beef up security?
You think you'll get him to promise to cut off "capability"-dependent programs (and their programmers) at the knees?
Seems like you're fighting a losing battle.
Objection: counsel is badgering the witness. The only appropriate answer would probably be, "Yes, we are, f*** you very much."
Stressed? Me? Of course not. Stress is what a rubber band feels before it breaks, silly.
Sounds like an acknowledgment of the extended timeline for something like Palladium/Trusted Computing. I've been curious to hear more about when and where that's actually going to show up.
He also reveals that he runs Firefox.
If you were working in the X divison of a company wouldn't YOU be using a competitors program so that you could know what they were doing to make their side better? I know I would.
In fact, I would be completely disappointed if he DIDN'T run Firefox.
"it's more of a 10-year timeline... but my stock options will be fully vested in 5 years, so I'll be long gone before the shit hits the fan on security still not being fixed!"
"Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney
The context made it seem more like he saw an opportunity to mention a flaw in the competing product.
StrategyTalk.com, PC Game Forums
Download.Ject information is actually here. The exploit referred to above is actually the "what a drag" exploit. Still pretty scary if you ask me.
Anyway, the editor (me) regrets this error. =)
Right is wrong when left is right.
And gee, I thought that service pack 2 with a firewall that can be controlled by ActiveX was going to fix all of those holes!
Oh, wait, actually service pack 2 renders some computer unbootable, so that must be the real trick!
Sadly, Firefox isn't affected.
;)
When will Open Source advocates realize that it's just this sort of behind-the-times technological gaffe that will keep Linux in single-digit marketshare forever?
I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate.
According to the Mayan Calendar We'll only get a year to enjoy it!
The first thing I thought of when I saw the guy's name. Still cracks me up everytime I see it. Am I the only one that thought of this sketch?
If everyone is spreading viruses, it ceases to be a stigma, and becomes the accepted norm. Think of it this way:
If everyone had AIDS, you wouldn't have to be all that concerned about STDs now, would you?
New Apple add:
iMac, its like a computer with a condom!
But that's just it, at least he had an update to install, MS doesn't release security updates as quickly as it needs too, as the first question mentioned.
They left the spinning to Slashdot. RTFA. The interviewee says:
It's not a switch that can be flipped. Software written by humans will always contain errors. We're fundamentally changing the way things operate, to help to make software more resistant to attacks. We're two and a half years down a much longer road; it's more of a 10-year timeline.
What me meant is that Microsoft is completely reworking the way their browser operates -- not just toughening a few system calls here and there. A total reconsideration of how a browser should be designed.
The Slashdot editors took that and spit out "AHAHA M$IE INSEKURE UNTIL 2011! LOL@GATES"
Hardly seems fair.
Cretin - a powerful and flexible CD reencoder
Comment removed based on user account deletion
What in the blazes does it mean for something to finally be "secure"?? It's not as if it's actually an achievable goal, and it's not as if you'd have a way to detect when you'd achieved it even if it was achievable.
The 100% secure line is an asymptote. You can get fractionally closer to it, but never ever actually achieve it.
Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.
You may think that its funny that firefox doesn't support Download.Ject technology, but for the rest of us in the real world, how can we offer it as an alternative to explorer? My PHB will just say "Ignignot, I like this FireFox thing you have working on my computer. But I've read in the Wall Street Journal that it doesn't support Download.Ject. I'm afraid we simply can't afford to make this switch."
We need this feature fixed now if not sooner, otherwise we're all going to be stuck using this insecure MS offering!
When will there ever be a feature complete open source internet explorer??
I submitted this story last night, and it didn't get posted.
he didn't say that FireFox was his primary browser, he just said that he had to patch it because of a vulnerability.
I would hope that as a program manager he would have a copy of each of the competing browsers on his system, so that he can steal... ah, borrow, ideas from them.
First, someone posted above, the analogy between windows security fix, and Slashdot's terrible "IT" theme.
Second, the idea that an MS head is using firefox is hardly surprising, it's much more at issue that he's willing to admit it to Wired, and doesn't even seem to mind that open source is a better alternative.
Microsoft has had a history of using open source projects, most famously with qmail+unix on their hotmail, but even branching to the MSN gaming zone, etc. It's really not too surprising, considering a lot of the unix foundation implemented in their NT-XP series.
"And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
1 John 4:14
He also reveals that he runs Firefox
/. zealots who don't take the article at face value.
Indeed, parent post is correct. Besides, the article doesn't say that he uses FireFox exclusively by any means. In fact he only mentions FireFox to prove that all browsers are susceptible to attacks.. Here's hoping he also uses NS, Opera, Safari, and whatever browser he can to do testing and research.
Yet more spin by
If I'm not mistaken, XP SP2 includes the work around which changes a registry entry related to the exploit. XP SP2 doesn't really fix this particular problem but disables the functionality that is being exploited. In a way, users aren't at risk, but if you rely on that functionality, well your out of luck for now or you must run with the risk.
What kind of pathetic headline is that? When did MS say "MS not expected secure until 2011"?!?! This is called sensationalist GARBAGE, people! Stop putting this swill up as headline material.
Having someone say "it's more of a 10-year timeline" does not equate to "MS not expected secure until 2011"...much less "MS says" 2011. The phrase "more of a..." connotes a generality. The headline is pure, conjured specificity.
Crap like this makes me become seriously disenchanted with Slashdot.
Change the following registry value to 4 and the new "Windows Security Center" will stop working upon reboot... it runs as a service that any admin user can kill. Did I mention that by default all XP users are admin ;)
w scsvc\Start
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\ControlSet001\Services\
Also, here's a Python script that will automatically kill the new "Windows Firewall" in to XP Service Pack 2. You can bet your ass that hackers are already tampering with this. Click a URL and bam... the firewall goes down.
This is just two example of what MS does to "secure" their systems. God help us all.
A) A Microsoft representative said that it will take an estimated 11 years to fully secure Windows
B) Slashdot reports this
What spinning or unfair editing took place here? Your pullquote doesn't seem to show anything unfair. Yes, they are reworking key system components. But that still doesn't change the fact that Windows is so insecure that it will, by their own admission, take over 10 years to fix it. That's pretty important.
This really needs to be modded down, as it's not only not insightful, it demonstrates a total lack of comprehension of Toulouse's response.
He did not say he didn't use IE. He simply mentioned needing to install a security update of Firefox. Yes, Virginia, there are other browsers that have security flaws other than IE. That doesn't make them better or worse, it just illustrates that the problem isn't isolated to Microsoft.
And I suspect that in performing his job duties, he needs to be familiar with a wide array of browser technologies, not just IE.
So, please mod the parent down -1, Needs a Clue.
Great. Linux should be ready for the desktop by then!
Are you...Are you some kind of genius?
No, ma'am, I'm just a regular Slashdot reader.
They could have put a spin on it.
It is likely that this is spin. When someone has a job that depends on the future security of a product that is likely next to impossible to make secure without a complete rewrite, what can he do? He has limited budjet, and unrealistic goals. So he makes a 10 year plan, saying that they will be secure in 10 years. He shows progress to his boss, and his boss is happy. He gets to keep his job.
Then, 2 years down the line, he revises his 10 year plan to expire in another 10 years - as long as the deadline is far enough away, he keeps his job, he puts food on the table, and the PR bunnies have something to hop about. This happens all the time in business, particularly publicly held companies. I would be very sceptical about any future Microsoft promises about security.
I submitted this story last night, and it didn't get posted.
"Microsoft is partly to blame, but they're the biggest fish in the sea. Every 'fisherman' is out to get them. When Linux or Mac or Mozilla or whatever becomes the primary player, they will be found out to have just as many liabilities in the security department, I'm sure... They may get fixed quicker because of the relative smallness and open source attributes, but the bugs are there. Just no one is looking/caring too much. Yet."
Linux is already one of the biggest players in the server department, and that's where a majority of viruses and exploits are aimed at... I still don't see announcements for all these business running Linux servers being compromised.... The fact is, Linux is theoretically and in actual practice more stable and secure. Windows isn't.. A virus won't JUST affect your user account files in Windows... I think they're mostly to blame...
" No... so, maybe we should just START to take a little blame for windows security problems. Stop running that cute screensaver your Aunt Matilda sent you. Don't go to webpages that advertise 'warez' and 'free 3leet mp3z!'"
People aren't that smart.
Since when did security become a goal you can achieve after a certain amount of time?
It's something you always need to keep an eye open for, and combat exploits whenever necessary. How can Microsoft say "it's more of a 10-year timeline". That statement alone makes me wonder how sane Microsoft's security program manager is. So Microsoft are going to dismantle their security team in 2011?
What would the Linux community think if Linus went out claiming that "we expect the Linux kernel to be secure in version 3.0"??
Anyone who takes software security seriously should understand that you can never expect a product to be secure after some period of time.
"Secure" is also relative and not at all an absolute term.
Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
This sounds like "death is good because it makes us appreciate life"...
Non-security is a thing we don't like, so of course we want to get rid of it.
-----
yeah, my englisk sucks
Relying on IE-only functionality (as I assume this is) is a retarded thing to do anyway, with the extreme gain in marketshare that Firefox has seen recently. People who make that mistake deserve a good slapping, or at the very least, a reality check.
Regardless of what Microsoft and their fans may think, the browser wars are all started up again. Anyone who designs their site to be IE-only nowadays is just asking for trouble. Unfortunately, it's not exactly uncommon.
Quality, performance, value; you get only two, and you don't always get to pick.
"Has the horrendous security done anything other than support thousands of jobs and spawed a massive aftermarket security industry?"
By that logic, we should view terrorism as good for the economy since it creates jobs for the folks employed at the office of Homeland Security.
Think, real hard. What other effects came from from security flaws (in either case)? Anything bad? Anything at all?
Perhaps this is just crazy talk, but I submit that there are better ways to stimulate the economy.
-kev
Those thousands of jobs are just running on a treadmill and sucking resources from companies that do real work. If Windows was secure, all that capital and talent could be used for something better.
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
New Apple add:
iMac, its like a computer with a condom!
New add for Linux:
Linux: you can't get infected unless you get laid.
I tried it on WinXP Pro (no SP2) IE 6.0.28 and it went through on the first try without even a warning from IE.
That's what I'd like to know. The article summary makes it sound like he uses Firefox because he doesn't trust IE.
All I found in the article was:
"Meanwhile, Firefox and Opera look awfully appealing.
Security is really an industry-wide problem. Just this morning I had to install an update to Firefox to block a flaw that would've allowed an attacker to run a program on my system."
That sounds more to me like he's trying to point out that other browsers can have vulnerabilities as well. He doesn't say anything about exclusively using Firefox. Maybe he just installed Firefox just to see what the competition is like.
Poor guy is really having to struggle to say something that'll make his job look less hopeless. The "patch to Firefox" that he's talking about is actually a patch to a PNG library used by a lot of applications, not just Firefox.
On the other hand, he didn't say "Windows not secure until 2011", and I think his "10 year plan" is more of an acknowledgement of the magnitude of the problem than a hint as to Microsoft's timeline.
I wonder if he's even got the authority to deal with the real problems buried deep in the design of IE. If not, they can take 10 years or 100 years and still not get rid of "cross zone" attacks. I suspect only hope is that other browser developers will suddenly agree with microsoft that security zones based on the current location of a file is a much better idea than limiting the potential targets for an attack to just the application that's responsible for downloading and displaying an untrusted document. If that happens, then they'll REALLY be able to argue "everyone else has the same problem" and mean it.
That's not a fix, that's a FUX. It looks like a fix but if you percieve a FUX to be a FIX, you're bound to get FUXED.
Seriously though, they can't fix it without removing IE from the system. You can easily get around their FUX by using a shell call... which makes this bug even scarier.
This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
The heavy use of anonymous pointers, multi-function entry points, and DLL initialization/release interactions create an absolute nightmare to maintain.
Even for a relatively small project, you have to spend a fair amount of time just getting code separated into mainline and DLL. Then you get the joy of dealing with the weirdities of the Windows variation on process interaction with DLLs.
I can't imagine any way of securing that spaghetti except to scrap the Win32 API and make the .Net framework the Windows programming layer. Then you can get rid of those holdover APIs from DOS-thunker days and replace the kernel with one that was designed for multi-user security.
You can be grateful Microsoft is finally taking security seriously if you like. I look back on 10-15 years of pager calls, system recoveries, and late projects because of bugs, many of which have never been fixed. My patience with their problems and excuses ended a long, long time ago.
Don't forget Microsoft has been around almost exactly as long as GNU.org. Linux is a pup compared to Windows, yet look how much faster that team addresses problems than the much larger team at Microsoft.
If Microsoft's market share begins hurting because of their security issues, they've no one else to blame but themselves. If the industry demands POSIX server APIs and Windows can't deliver, Microsoft has no one to blame but themselves -- the Cygwin team seems to have managed the task.
Microsoft and a lot of other companies need to get back to re-verifying their core business and refocus on producing marketable products and services. Times change, and last decade's sure winner is last year's end-of-life product. A little less focus on the stock market, and a little more on realistic business models and long-term viability.
I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
For feck's sake. That's the SIMPLEST install?
Simple to me means 'double click the installer, then type your password when it asks for it'.
I'm not wrong. You haven't thought about it hard enough.
Linux remote-root exploits just happen rarely and kernel exploits even more so.
But what excuse does the biggest software company in the world have to not fix the gaping security holes in their two most used and probably most sensitive applications, explorer and outlook?
We are watching this weekly windows exploit drama not for months but for years now. It's getting really old and its not funny at all anymore.
The worms we have seen were pretty harmless in my book, I'm still waiting for the one that carries some more serious payload. Like wiping out all accessible drives (network volumes), saturating all network cards with malicious packets, stuff like that. MS probably needs that kind of wake up call but are they really that bone-headed to not see it coming?
Read this.
Melius mori in libertate quam vivere in servitute.
Linux will always be 1 step ahead in security.
MS will always be 1 step ahead in features.
Guess what, features sell. Maybe in the year 3000 things might be different.
The objection is not that Microsoft's software is insecure, but rather that their closest competition has at least two orders of magnitude fewer exploits and viruses than they.
If hundreds of exploits per month were discovered for Macs or Linux, your point would be valid. Problem is, the number of exploits available for all computers systems since the 50's is easily less than the number discovered in Windows in one year.
To make matters worse the rate at which exploits are being discovered is increasing, not decreasing, or even remaining stable. And this from a company making three billion dollars a month. How is it then, that a bunch of ragtag volunteers put together a more secure OS than a company which can spend a billion dollars a month on development?
Microsoft Windows, and the attendant problems it has experienced has brought shame on the entire profession. It isn't a matter of a few human errors here and there - Microsoft releases code with wanton disregard for the effects it will have on the user. You would expect more from a such a successful company, but apparently, Microsoft believes the professional standards followed by the rest of the industry simply do not apply to them.
And that, is why they get bashed. They dismiss the wisdom gained by years of computer science, and when their systems run rampant with bugs and security holes, they claim that such lofty goals as security and reliability are unattainable - in spite of the fact that their peers who did heed the lessons of computers science have managed to build such systems.
The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
when asked about their now 2 year old focus on security, comments "it's more of a 10-year timeline."
I didn't read the article. This was Bush talking about Iraq, right?
free online diet tracking.
From the article:
"Security is really an industry-wide problem. Just this morning I had to install an update to Firefox to block a flaw that would've allowed an attacker to run a program on my system."
I presume that Toulouse was referring to the update that fixed the "shell:" exploit.... this was only a problem with Firefox on Windows machines, because the flaw is inherit in the OS, not in the Firefox browser.
True, security is an issue about which everyone in the industry should be concerned. Call a spade a spade, though... Microsoft is well behind the curve.
-- Halfabee
Just tried it on a fresh SP2 install and it works. The kicker is even after I've closed IE I still can't delete the boom.exe file from startup because its being used by a different program. Oh well, might as well disarm it (yeah I know its a 0kb exe but what the hey) with msconfig.
The handful of sites that don't work well with Firefox/Moz is really a small price to pay for the added security especially in regards to drive-by spyware installs.
Your comment was:
"He doesn't "reveal" that he uses Firefox either. Nowhere in the article does it state such."
To quote TFA:
"Security is really an industry-wide problem. Just this morning I had to install an update to Firefox to block a flaw that would've allowed an attacker to run a program on my system."
Please RTFA before posting corrections to the comments of others. Thank you.
I write software that doesn't contain errors, every day, on systems which deal with far more data than the average MS app.
I find this hard to believe. Are you saying that you write software that is as complex as the usual MS app, and that it contains no errors whatsoever and has never had to be debugged? It seems like everyone from Knuth on down has written bugs in software when working on an application of non-trivial complexity, so I'm a little skeptical if that's your claim.
And the amount of data that an app processes is not the only measure of a program's complexity: does your program interoperate with a dozen others in a standard cut-and-paste manner; does it hide the complexity of operation from the end user so he or she can point and click and get things done; does it use an API so that software writers outside of your company can can write apps that interact with it; does your software run on multiple different hardware platforms; do you add new features to it when marketing surveys show people want it?
I'm not saying that all of those criteria are necessarily the best or most desirable (e.g., sometimes you want software that's only usable by industry professionals), but those are the constraints that Microsoft operates within, and they all increase the complexity of even the simplest-seeming of applications.
"Hardly used" will not fetch you a better price for your brain.
can your car go as fast as my bicycle?
can my sister pee farther than my uncle?
how many different programs can you burn dvd's with in linux?
how many linux computers can play doom 3?
I'm not playing favorites, just objecting to your biased list.
every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random