Microsoft Gets Help From NSA for Vista Security
An anonymous reader writes "The Washington Post is reporting that Microsoft received help from the National Security Agency in protecting the Vista operating system from worms and viruses. The Agency aimed to help as many people as they could, and chose to assist Vista with good reason: the OS still has a 90 percent lock on the PC market, with some 600 million Vista users expected by 2010. From the article: 'The Redmond, Wash., software maker declined to be specific about the contributions the NSA made to secure the Windows operating system ... Microsoft said this is not the first time it has sought help from the NSA. For about four years, Microsoft has tapped the spy agency for security expertise in reviewing its operating systems, including the Windows XP consumer version and the Windows Server 2003 for corporate customers.'"
So our Taxes (for us US residents) are going to the Government (NSA included) to help secure Vista so Microsoft can sell it to us Taxpayers and make more money. What do you say that Microsoft should mark down the price of each Vista copy sold by $1 until the monetary value of the NSA's help is repaid?
Hey, here's a tip for all you foreign governments out there: Don't use Windows! I hope that helps!
Seriously, I can't believe that there isn't greater demand for other alternatives to Windows in foreign governments. I wonder if Mahmoud Ahmadinejad uses windows...
Also, there' no mention of how much of the NSA's advice MS has used and how much they've ignored.
Unless I missed it, while reading the article I kept expecting there to be a mention about the possible inclusion of a backdoor. Maybe my tinfoil hat is too tight but it seems like a valid question these days when discussing the NSA and operating systems. Especially for an upcoming consumer OS given that the sixpack set is reading more and more about privacy and fourth ammendment concerns in the mainstream press.
Point being, it seems like something that the vendor would want to dispel pronto. (Yes, Apple and Novell also as they collaborate with the NSA per TFA).
On one hand since the NSA has been helping with linux security for years with SELinux, it seems only fair that they would be willing to similarly assist M$. But my concern would be whether they are violating the GPL under which they released SELinux. If they are using concepts they developed for the open source SELinux in Vista, shouldn't M$ be required to open source at least those portions of Vista?
When is the NSA gonna help with Red Hat, Mandrake or Mac OS? I must say that this is totally off the board. MS should be paying the NSA to help with this. They should be footing the bill!
When a man lies he murders a part of the world.
It doesn't sound like NSA helped write code - it sounds like their primary contribution was in testing:
."
"The NSA also declined to be specific but said it used two groups -- a "red team" and a "blue team" -- to test Vista's security. The red team, for instance, posed as "the determined, technically competent adversary" to disrupt, corrupt or steal information. "They pretend to be bad guys," Sager said. The blue team helped Defense Department system administrators with Vista's configuration
Also, Microsoft isn't the only company that NSA and other govt. agencies have helped with security. Besides SELinux, which others have mentioned, there's Apple:
"Other software makers have turned to government agencies for security advice, including Apple, which makes the Mac OS X operating system. "We work with a number of U.S. government agencies on Mac OS X security and collaborated with the NSA on the Mac OS X security configuration guide," said Apple spokesman Anuj Nayar in an e-mail."
So this isn't that big a deal, it's just that Microsoft is trying to capitalize on the relationship to counter the prevailing belief (or truth?) that Windows is insecure and that Vista is no big improvement.
No sig? Sigh...
The encryption cat is out of the bag, so if you can't own the communication channel, own the computers on either end.
Sure, I'm just delusional. But then again, there was that WMF exploit that according to Security guy Steve Gibson (grc.com and the SecurityNow podcast) inferred that was deliberately put in the code by someone (though he didn't point the finger at MS, some contractor for MS, at the Gov't direction, or anyone else). Before it was patched, it allowed the execution of arbitrary code on a client computer, caused by merely visiting a website that had a WMF icon/image in it.
Sure sound like a useful tool to fight terrorists who communicate on the internet (or anyone else).
There's an easy way to deal with complex password requirements. One place I worked required 8 characters with at least one capital letter, one lower case letter, one number, and one punctuation mark. Plus, they required a new one every month. To top it off, they kept track of the last three passwords and you couldn't reuse them. I just memorized a pattern on the keyboard (like e4r5t6y7) and hit the shift key a couple times. Then when I changed the password, I just shifted the pattern over one letter (r5t6y7u8) Never had to write it down and I didn't forget.
- None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
When IBM invented DES, the NSA asked to review it before IBM started selling it. DES is an encryption algorithm that involves repeatedly permuting and shifting bits. The bit shifting phase is handled by sending the permuted bits through what are called s-boxes which basically say 'move this bit over there'. NSA "requested" two revisions to DES - shorten the key to 56 bits and re-arrange some of the s-box operations. NSA didn't say why that would be "better" but made it clear to IBM that if IBM didn't comply, IBM would run into difficulties selling DES. The kind of difficulties that governments are very adept at raising. So IBM complied and implemented NSA's "requests." The presumption has always been that NSA knew how to crack the revised version of DES.
I'm curious if NSA made similar "requests" to Microsoft.
Isn't this a bit like chickens getting help from a pack of wolves for their security needs?
Perhaps I'm being too cynical, as both MS and the NSA have just stellar track records on their concern for an individual's privacy . . .
The Australian Defence Signals Directorate is also charted to undertake a similar role.
I'm not certain I follow your last sentence, though agencies that 'may' or 'may not' undertake active sigint would be wise (depending upon your moral guidance unit) to keep tabs on vulnerabilities. Not just in Microsoft products, but a very wide range of software and hardware systems. Including Linux. Yes, the NSA audits (just about) all external code before it is let loose inside. I say almost simply because viruses and the like have in the past been transported across the air gap.
There are many reasons to get chatty with commercial entities though.
Why do you think that the vatican could make miracles?
Why don't you turn to God directly?
God and the church are very, very different things. Church bosses often talk as if they were mandated by God, which they are not, and indeed they often talk and act like charlatans. We all have to take on ourselves to live according to the Word. Then we ourselves will be the miracles.