Microsoft has laid the blame for half of all Windows crashes on third-party code.
Scott Charney, chief security strategist at Microsoft, told developers
at the TechEd 2003 conference in Brisbane, that information collected
by Dr Watson, the company's reporting tool, revealed that "half of all
crashes in Windows are caused not by Microsoft code, but third-party
code".
Charney's comments come as the company highlights the rigour
with which it tests its own products before release. Microsoft
emphasised that products such as Yukon and Exchange Server were
undergoing thorough testing -- both internally and via independent
third parties -- prior to their release to the market.
The company is employing root cause analysis and event
sequence analysis procedures to scrub out the creation of sloppy code.
The result is that individual developers have a high degree of
accountability for the code they produce, while the systems and
processes associated with code development are rigorously monitored.
Root cause analysis enables the company to check closely the
work of individual developers. “If a developer has written vulnerable
code, then we look at what else that developer has written and check
it,” Charney said
Event sequence analysis takes this further, analysing the
reasons why the vulnerable code was written. Charney said it was not
necessarily so they can sack whoever is writing vulnerable code, but
find out the reasons why and how Microsoft improve their staff with
training or more efficient processes.
As Charney made his remarks, Charles Sturt University announced
they would be offering a Master of Information Systems Security degree
including MCSE:Security industry certification.
Charney's also reinforced Microsoft's message to developers and
network administrators that they needed to build secure applications
and networks "from the ground up".
The chief security strategist's remarks have come at an unfortunate
time, as mainstream and niche media outlets produce heavy coverage of
the impact of the MSBlast worm, which has infiltrated corporate and
enterprise networks worldwide.
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