Mike Nash, corporate vice president overseeing Microsoft's Security Technology Unit
Mike Nash, corporate vice president overseeing Microsoft's Security Technology Unit
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

vnunet.com interview: Microsoft security boss Mike Nash

'No silver bullet' for online security, warns Security Technology Unit chief

Tom Sanders at WinHEC in Seattle, vnunet.com 31 May 2006
ADVERTISEMENT

Microsoft chairman Bill Gates declared in 2003 that security is a top priority and launched the firm's Security Development Lifecycle initiative. The company appointed Mike Nash as corporate vice president overseeing the Security Technology Unit.

The forthcoming launch of Windows Vista marks the first desktop operating system developed under the new security focus, and is considered a vital test for Nash's work.

Nash is about to step down from his current job and go on a three-month sabbatical. He will be replaced by Ben Fathi, who previously worked as general manager for storage and high availability in the Windows group.

During the Windows Hardware Engineering Conference in Seattle, vnunet.com sat down with Nash to talk about Vista's security and future directions for security within Microsoft.

This interview is also available as an audio podcast on the Silicon Valley Sleuth blog.

Is your job done now that Microsoft has launched Window Vista Beta 2?

Overall we have a lot of work to do to make sure we address customer needs around 'fit and finish' and verify the security of Window Vista. Beta 2 is a milestone for customers to evaluate the work we've done for the platform overall.

What are the big security advancements in Vista?

There are really two big areas on which we focused. Number one is the focus around quality and security engineering, but we're also focusing around adding the appropriate features into the operating system.

For a quality perspective, about four years ago or so Bill Gates published his Trustworthy Computing memo. This was talking about not just the kinds of products we want to built, but also the way we want to build products.

Certainly security is an important pillar of Trustworthy Computing. Overall we've learned a lot about security over the last four or five years and in particular developed a new engineering process called the Security Development Lifecycle.


All Enterprise Security Technology

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
| Aston Carter
C++ Research Developer Global Pharmaceutical Company London C++ Research Developer Biotechology Global Medical Company London Global Biotechnology Company specialising in the research and development of cutting edge health care products is looking for an innovative, ... more >
| Aston Carter
Your role will be working on direct market access and exchange connectivity part of the application built in C++ on a Unix platform. The team is currently just 9 people including architect and team lead, ... more >
| Aston Carter
This is a fantastic opportunity working for a leading global software house, which is part of a larger multi media company. The role is working in the core development team in central London developing a ... more >
| Aston Carter
C++, Developer, OO, Unix/NT, API, London, City, Graduate A senior core C++/ Unix developer wanting to work in the heart of the city for one of London's most successful companies is required. The successful candidate ... more >
More job opportunities