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Bill Gates and the ongoing fight for trustworthy computing

Microsoftโ€™s task of securing its software was a huge undertaking, one that isnโ€™t over yet. One of the great, and possibly under recognised, business achievements of the computer age was Bill Gatesโ€™ recognition that Microsoftโ€™s online strategy was flawed shortly after releasing Windows 95. A few years later he had to repeat the task when […]
Paul Wallbank
Paul Wallbank
Bill Gates and the ongoing fight for trustworthy computing

Microsoftโ€™s task of securing its software was a huge undertaking, one that isnโ€™t over yet.

One of the great, and possibly under recognised, business achievements of the computer age was Bill Gatesโ€™ recognition that Microsoftโ€™s online strategy was flawed shortly after releasing Windows 95. A few years later he had to repeat the task when the company found its products were almost dangerously insecure.

In a sprawling account of the companyโ€™s response to the security problems at the turn of the century, Life In The Digital Crosshairs, describes how Microsoftโ€™s engineers responded to their then CEOโ€™s call for Trustworthy Computing.

The problems at the time were vast, compounded by Microsoftโ€™s failure to take security seriously โ€“ the first version of Windows XP came out without a firewall which ensured thousands of users were quickly infected by the computer worms rampant on many ISPs networks at the time.

As the story tells, it was a long difficult task for Microsoft to change complex and interdependent computer code involving 8500 of the companyโ€™s engineers.

One suspects the cultural challenges were even greater in getting the managers supervising the army of engineers to understand just how serious the security threat was to Microsoftโ€™s users.

The biggest challenge though was Microsoftโ€™s own product line; because the company hadnโ€™t โ€˜bakedโ€™ security into its software, key products like Microsoft Office relied on lax security practices to work properly.

Office and Windows also had the problem of legacy code and applications; one of Microsoftโ€™s selling points over Apple and other competitor systems was that the company took pride in supporting older hardware and software, this in itself creates security risks when programs designed in the MS-DOS days still want to write to the system kernel.

For Microsoft the journey isnโ€™t over, although the shift to cloud computing has changed โ€“ and simplified โ€“ the companyโ€™s security quest by making legacy issues in Office and Windows less important.

Microsoft and Gatesโ€™ success in seeing off the threats posed by the internet gave the company another decade of computer industry dominance; however, dealing with security issues was nowhere near successful.

In the end, however, it wasnโ€™t security issues that saw Microsoft lose its dominance; the internet eventually prevailed as Apple revolutionised mobile computing while Amazon and Google improved cloud services.

With Bill Gates reportedly finding himself getting more involved in the company he founded, the challenges of both the internet and security are two that heโ€™s going to be very familiar with. It will be interesting to see what we write about Microsoft in 2022.

Paul Wallbank is the publisher of Networked Globe, his personal blog Decoding The New Economy charts how our society is changing in the connected century.

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