• On MovieTome: TRANSFORMERS 2 SPOILERS!

July 12, 2005 10:05 AM PDT

Newsmaker: Microsoft on ID theft watch

See all Newsmakers
Microsoft on ID theft watch
As the chief privacy strategist for Microsoft, Peter Cullen has an onerous responsibility.

Microsoft software routinely collects information from millions of computers around the world, quietly, and often without the owner's explicit knowledge.

Harvesting this kind of private information may seem intrusive, but Microsoft claims it is done for a good reason--the more information the company has on users, the better it can protect them.

For example, the Sender ID system, backed by Microsoft, checks tags on an e-mail to make sure it really is coming from the purported sender. That technology can help people avoid phishing attacks, Microsoft says.

Cullen spoke about what Microsoft is doing to help counteract identity theft, the increasing threat of phishing attacks and the ever-present menace of spam.

How do you differentiate your role from that of chief security officer or equivalent?
Cullen: At the core definition level, security is about how to keep information confidential, and privacy is about the use of information. But the two are very related. Look at a phishing event. What started off as a security event--something that caused the customer's information to be collected inappropriately--ended up the with customer's information being used, perhaps for identity theft, which is a privacy issue. Around the world, all privacy information has a security component to it.

On an issue like identity theft, what can Microsoft do to help people guard against that?
Cullen: We approach it from a number of angles. Look at the fight against spam as an example. There were really four buckets of things we had to look at. One was technology solutions. The second is education, and there are two strands: One is consumer education, so we help them by showing how to interact with online vendors and when not to.

Around the world, all privacy information has a security component to it.

The other area that we focus on is partnerships with industry. So if we think about spam, it is about working with other industry players on ways to combat spam.

And then there is government, and in particular, working with government on the law enforcement side of things. We have launched about 120 actions against spammers, phishers (and) spyware purveyors around the world.

Two years ago, (spam) was about marketing and offering us body parts we didn't need. Today, it is about a delivery mechanism for

More Newsmakers

CONTINUED: ...
Page 1 | 2

See more CNET content tagged:
identity theft, phishing, spam, spyware, Microsoft Corp.

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 4 comments
Making email proprietary ? NO
by My-Self July 12, 2005 2:32 PM PDT
Solving (a part of) the spam problem in exchange of having Microsoft in control of Email now, then give them a patented extension to HTML to prevent phishing ...

Security is a real concern, but it should not make all of us blind !
Reply to this comment
Is he SERIOUS?!
by Revolutn July 12, 2005 4:14 PM PDT
Cullen: It is really tough to identify one big issue...A year ago, the term "phishing" didn't exist. Spyware, a year ago, was about tracking where users went for the purpose of feeding them ads. Now it is about keystroke-loggers being put on people's PCs.


Uhm, I really don't have to say much, his statement stands on its own.

Well OK maybe just a thing or two:

A year ago phising didn't EXIST?!

Pfffffffffffffewwwwwwwww.
And Cullen is the "Chief Privacy Strategist" for Microsoft.

HOLY CROW BAT MAN!

I thought I could say more on the subject, but frankly I'm to friggin stunned, my brain actually hurts from reading this mans naive, uninformed, ignorant assertions and opinions which as far as I can tell aren't based in any reality along the Space-Time Continuum that everyone else is living in.

Yikes!

Rev.
Reply to this comment
It is scary.
by July 12, 2005 8:23 PM PDT
To make such errors on simple topics, and yet be in an apparently lofty position at MS... We can only hope he had stage fright.
No chance
by July 12, 2005 8:18 PM PDT
It'll never fly beyond a passport-doomed experiment until it's open and patent free. What is so difficult to understand about this?
Reply to this comment
advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Dow Jones Industrials (-1.20%) -105.53 8,664.17
S&P 500 (-0.59%) -5.38 901.27
NASDAQ (-0.10%) -1.58 1,597.48
CNET TECH (-0.51%) -5.82 1,127.54
  Symbol Lookup

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right