
Okay, so I intentionally used a salacious headline to get your attention. It’s Thursday. The NSA didn’t really help make Windows 7. Rather, using its “unique expertise and operational knowledge of system threats and vulnerabilities” the National Security Agency helped shape “Microsoft’s operating system security guide”, according to Richard Sharffer, Information Assurance Director at the NSA. The NSA works with other companies, like Red Hat, Apple, and Sun, too. The NSA started the Security Enhanced Linux initiative in 2003, so it should come as no surprise that its been working to help secure Windows, too.
The Two-way, NPR’s news blog, has a cursory story about the help NSA provided. Usually known as a spook organization intent on spying on people, the NSA is also “charged with protecting the nation’s national security computing infrastructure from online assaults.”
“More and more, we find that protecting national security systems demands teaming with public and private institutions to raise the information assurance level of products and services more broadly,” Schaeffer said.
The dominance of Microsoft Windows as a general-purpose computing platform means that the NSA has a vested interest in making it as secure as it can. The alternative is to enter into the OS development market to make GovOS, the only sanctioned operating system for use on U.S. government PCs. That’s impractical, to say the least.
Oh, and while the NSA is providing consultative services to the security models used in Microsoft operating systems, it can also surreptitiously insert backdoors to make it easier to spy on us. :)









Argh. Tricked again.
It took the government too long to get on top of this considering that Microsoft was making their buggy source code available to the countries of the world since 2001 (or 2003? article sources vary). Source code sharing with Industry partners started a little later.
http://www.microsoft.com/resources/sharedsource/gsp.mspx
http://www.microsoft.com/resources/sharedsource/default.mspx
Google: Microsoft Government Security Program
The NSA’s involvement might’ve helped with the ongoing wave of cyber-attacks but until the sources are available to everyone… we’re still pretty much targets. So basically the governments and corporations have access to the sources. Not sure how much of the sources are available to academia.
Microsoft’s modularized software development system (where one set of programmers doesn’t know what the other is doing) complicates things further.
I’m not surprised. We need a secure Windows.
Yeah but what can one do living in a world of Espionage and Stealth. Or is it Stealth and Espionage? It sort of makes it complicated.
We got greet build in and you cant bash it out.
The Human race needs a new OS.
Anybody know how to install it?