http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/4/25291.html

By John Leyden
Posted: 15/05/2002 at 14:12 GMT

Microsoft should dump security via obscurity, and submit its software 
to open source review, according to Gartner. 

The open source review bit is something so utterly alien, communist
and horrible to the mind of Bill Gates that it's almost worth us
running a competition to find what he'd rather do (Sacrifice of
firstborn? Auction mother on eBay? Tell Steve Jobs he was right?) -
but actually, Gartner is perpetrating a small piece of sensationalism
by saying it agrees with Gates about security, "and believes that open
source review of Microsoft's code is necessary to meet security
goals."

Which is not the same as saying this is what Bill believes, but they
had us going for a moment there.

Gartner contrasts the assertion by Jim Allchin, Microsoft's senior
vice president for Windows, that Windows boxes would be more
vulnerable to attack if the company had to disclose technical
information to rivals with previous pronouncements by his Billness.

But computer hackers have had little difficulty breaking into
Microsoft's closed-source software, it notes.

Gartner analyst John Pescatore writes : "a strategy of relying on
security through obscurity (hiding source code) has already proven a
failure for Microsoft. To make future products more trustworthy,
Microsoft will have to become more expert at developing code that can
withstand external review."

Over the long term open documentation and public review of program
interfaces between OSs and applications will lead to better security
for Microsoft, Gartner believes, even though it notes some short term
problems.

"Attackers may exploit the exposed interfaces in the short term as the
process brings to light existing yet undiscovered vulnerabilities. But
this approach simply means that insecure code will become secure more
rapidly," Pescatore writes.

Allchin's belief that security offers a valid reason to reject making
source code visible is misplaced, the analysts conclude.

The disclosure by Microsoft of technical information to rivals, which
would allow them to make sure their software works better with
Windows, is among the remedies put forward by the nine dissenting
states during the current anti-trust trial.



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