Microsoft tests 'Geneva' identity tech in schools

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Microsoft is testing some of its new identity-based security technology in Washington state schools, where students and teachers will be able to securely access grades and class schedules, a Microsoft executive said in a keynote address on Tuesday at the RSA 2009 security conference in San Francisco.

The software company is working with the Lake Washington School District — comprised of 50 schools and nearly 24,000 students in and around Microsoft's home town of Redmond — to deploy its Geneva claims-based identity platform, said Scott Charney, corporate vice president of Microsoft's Trustworthy Computing Group.

Students and parents will bring identification information into the school to prove children's identities, and the students will then get small notebook PCs with identity information cards on them to be used for accessing online education materials.

Microsoft announced the Geneva technology on 15 April when it introduced its first hosted security service under the Forefront brand.

A former leading federal prosecutor for computer crimes at the Justice Department, Charney left PricewaterhouseCoopers to join Microsoft as chief security strategist in 2002.

"Initially my friends laughed because I used 'Microsoft' and 'security' in the same sentence," he quipped. Microsoft has made progress since then, he added.

In addition to improving the security of Windows, Microsoft offers SmartScreen technology in Internet Explorer 8 that allows users to block malware from being downloaded onto their computers. The company also shares its Software Development Lifecycle guidelines and tools for building secure software with outside developers and firms.

Current mechanisms used by websites to protect consumer data by requiring people to prove they are authorised to access sites are broken, Charney said. Websites ask for personal information, such as city of birth and mother's maiden name, "but those secrets aren't secret at all", he said. "We need a different model for thinking about identity."

All of Microsoft's security news is designed to further the company's mission to provide what it calls 'End to End Trust' for people using the internet, regardless of what data they are working with, what hardware they are using, and where they are located.

Key to the End to End Trust initiative, which was launched at RSA last year, is a trusted stack of components that authenticate everything from the user to the data and applications.

In addition to software features for authentication and identity, the Windows 7 beta includes support for Trusted Platform Modules that provide encryption at the hardware level.

In discussing all the threats and risks internet users face today, Charney revealed what he called 'Charney's Theorem': "There's always a percentage of the population up to no good".

Talkback

In the U.S. a lot of them reside in Washington, DC, and a lot of them are in a company in Redmond, Washington.

ator1940 22 April, 2009 12:46
Reply

Systems that you can only access if your using MS operating systems is probably closer to the real reason for this technologies existence. MS has always tried to create lock in to leverage the spread of their other products and this sounds no different.

pround 22 April, 2009 20:35
Reply

See this report from the EU in connection with their anti-trust cases against Microsoft.

http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20090421111327711

Interesting reading!

Moley 22 April, 2009 22:39
Reply

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