Roger Halbheer

Job title:
Chief security advisor, Microsoft

Areas of expertise:
Policy, architecture, law enforcement, cybersecurity, processes

Biography:
Roger Halbheer joined Microsoft as Chief Security Advisor of Microsoft Switzerland in 2001 and was promoted to the role of Chief Security Advisor for Microsoft Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) in February 2007. Roger leads a team of national Chief Security Advisors across EMEA who work with organizations in the commercial and public sectors - including national governments, law enforcement and intelligence agencies - on information technology issues and strategies. He is a trusted advisor to C-level executives, governments and law enforcement agencies and has established relationships with security communities and government agencies across the region. Roger is a regular speaker at industry events and has worked with national and international print and broadcast media both to represent Microsoft and to provide expert comment on broader security issues. A Swiss national, Roger holds a Master of Computer Science degree from the Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich and is a Certified Information System Security Professional (CISSP). Before joining Microsoft, he was responsible for e-Business Risk Management at PricewaterhouseCoopers in Switzerland. He lives in Zurich and is married with two sons.

Tag Cloud

Bloggers

Blog

Could Microsoft solve the scareware problem?

This morning I read the following article: Microsoft can help kill fake antivirus threat. And interesting approach. The proposal is that we could white-list all the legitimate security software within the OS in order to make it harder to trick the user. Well, would this work? I am not so sure:

  • First of all, what is Security Software and how do you find out? All the the security vendors can play by the rules and make sure it is detectable. But sacreware (fake anti-malware software) will probably not – or will for sure not. So, what is the difference between any legitimate application, any application which interacts with the desktop and presents a GUI vs. scareware? Scareware just show scary windows and makes you install their software – which is typically malware.
  • The base technology is in Windows but it would have to be applied to security software only.
  • What is legitimate security software? There are obvious ones like Symantec’s, McAfee’s, TrendMicros’, F-Secure’s, Microsoft's solutions. That’s easy. But I am sure (just an experience from the past) that there will be a pretty big gray zone which makes it very hard to decide and who decides then – us?
  • Last but not least, let’s talk about the regulators. Do they (and does the market) really want us to take this decision and “certify” anti-malware solutions? This would come with a price – and reading the comments in the article below, this is one of the issues.

To me, the problem is wider spread than “just” fake anti-malware solutions. I understand that this is a problem – definitely and I understand that the thoughts of white-listing security software is attractive. But the problem is malware in general and how the criminals trick the user into installing something they do not want. This leads back to the question of the trusted stack which we address in our End to End Trust vision. To me, that’s the only approach which can be successful

Roger

Posted 22/10/2009 by Roger Halbheer

Tagged under: scareware , consumer

Comment on this blog

You must be registered and logged in to leave a comment about this blog.