Vista Tested by the NSA? Is it safe?

TheCigSmokingMan

Rift Surfer
I hear in news reports that the NSA tested Vista for Microsoft and Bill Gates DARES anyone to hack it.

Mmmm...

I think it's time for a MAC.

Be Warned! :)

TheCigMan
 
Cancer man,

You raise good awareness. Vista would have had a future if perhaps they had better beta testers. Aside from that, gates, is in for some beating.

/CD
 
Cubikdice,

As for "You raise good awareness. Vista would have had a future if perhaps they had better beta testers. Aside from that, gates, is in for some beating."

Just doing my part to watch the Military Industrail Complex as our greatest president, Eisenhower, told us to do... :)

I hear in the latest reviews that no peripherals work with Vista... It has a long way to go...

And its nice to know I'm not just posting for myself :)

TheCigMan
 
vista is horrid. 3rd party support for vista definitely isnt what it should be, and i agree, if they had better beta testers (like me :) ) they'd have done alot better.
 
NSA guru lauds security intelligence sharing

NSA guru lauds security intelligence sharing
Efforts to share security data are helping to foster community approach necessary to improve IT practices, said an NSA expert presenting at Black Hat

http://www.infoworld.com/article/07/08/01/NSA-guru-lauds-security-intelligence-sharing_1.html

By Matt Hines
August 01, 2007

Government initiatives aimed at fostering the sharing of security intelligence throughout the federal space are helping to establish the community atmosphere and best practices necessary to help those agencies -- and private enterprises -- improve their network and applications defenses, a National Security Agency leader told attendees of the Black Hat conference on Wednesday.

Stepping to the stage to deliver a keynote presentation at the annual hacker confab in Las Vegas, Tony Stager, chief of the Vulnerability Analysis and Operations Group at the NSA, said that data-sharing efforts led by his agency and others in the federal space are maturing rapidly.

Having served a little less than 30 years as a security expert at the NSA, Stager said that federal agencies are finally succeeding in their efforts to build standards for issues such as secure configuration of Microsoft's Windows operating systems, and that those guidelines are likewise being adopted by other security initiatives and moving into the public arena.

At the heart of the progress is the notion that government entities and private institutions cannot effectively tackle security problems on their own, a deduction that seems obvious, but one that has been hard to implement on a practical level, in particular among agencies such as the NSA and U.S. Department of Defense, which closely guard all their IT policies.

"NSA has shifted the nature of its work over the last few years; the time has come when we are all living in this same chaotic network and need to come together to solve problems of this scale," Sager said.

"In the old days, the idea was that we could simply design away the risk, but this is a much more complex world today," he said. "We've gone from protecting [assets] to protecting not only data, but all the information around that and the infrastructure that supports it; it's a much more dynamic problem, and there's no way of escaping that this is a shared problem."

As part of its effort to help foster security data sharing, NSA has moved its focus from trying to build technologies aimed at solving major security issues to attempting to influence practices across the government space that can also be adopted by private-sector firms, he said.

A major element of the vision is pushing for standards that translate security intelligence into language that any organization can interpret, said Sager. He highlighted the Common Weakness Enumeration (CWE) project -- an effort aimed at creating a common language for identifying software vulnerabilities that is backed by the Department of Homeland Security and nonprofit Mitre -- as one example of the types of standards that are delivering on the NSA's goal.

"The time has come when folks in my business are thinking about how to transfer knowledge outwardly; we don't solve these problems one organization or one vulnerability at a time, so we're thinking of ways to leverage knowledge in light of the available economies of scale," Sager said. "We must be able to deliver expertise within the context of others' problems. In that way, this has become a business of influence [for the NSA]."

-------------------------------------------------------

Lots of security holes to worry about... :)

TheCigMan
 
Re: NSA guru lauds security intelligence sharing

The hacker world has known about the holes for a long time and even the security researchers were horrified when the Vista came out as 'holy' as it still is. I cannot see and haven't seen any contracts out there to roll out old XP platform and bring in the Vista. The business world is going more and more back to the mainframe cycle where user only gets virtual 2003 window on their console and they do all the work at there. What comes to the 64-bit applications on the Vista, you have to have noticed the news pieces saying that the 64-bit XP can do them and top of everything Ubuntu is growing stronger and stronger every single day.
 
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