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Security Strategy

Microsoft sticks with controversial Longhorn security

Not ready yet... but then what is?

By Ina Fried

Published: 9 September 2004 09:25 GMT

Although Microsoft continues to tweak a controversial architecture for securing PCs it still plans to include the feature in Longhorn, the next release of Windows.

The software maker stressed that Longhorn will work either with or without enabling the Next Generation Secure Computing Base (NGSCB), a technology designed to make PCs more secure by shifting sensitive data and operations into a separate part of the computer's operation. The software maker also continues an overhaul of the technology, which is already quite different from the code that was given out to developers at Microsoft's Professional Developer Conference last year.

Steve Heil, Windows technical evangelist, said: "We're making some modifications based on feedback from the industry."

The revamped NGSCB will still allow companies that use it to separate things such as keystrokes and user logins into a separate "compartment" within Windows, a move that should make such information harder for hackers to access. One of the big changes is that these compartments are based on Windows programming interfaces as compared with the custom code that was required in the version given out at the Professional Developer Conference.

The technology will continue to let companies also run custom programs, or "scenarios," within a secure layer, although that appears to be less of the focus then when Microsoft first demonstrated the software last year. At the time there was concern that Microsoft was trying to lock in Windows customers and that it could lock users out of their data.

Heil said potential customers were concerned that the security benefits of the earlier approach were outweighed by the pain involved in changing their internal applications.

Microsoft has been trying to create these kinds of changes to Windows for more than half a decade, when developers and researchers at the company first outlined the ideas of a "Trusted Windows". The initiative took on the code name Palladium in 2002, and, Heil said, raised the ire of those who saw it as the equivalent of digital rights management on a chip.

The latest changes have been in the works for a while, with the shift first evident at the WinHec conference last spring in Seattle.

Despite the changes, Heil said Microsoft still plans for some version of the technology to be included in Longhorn. "We're on track to have...at least some of those features in the Longhorn release," Heil said.

Ina Fried writes for News.com

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