Share

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

Power of Knowledge: Security Intelligence Report v7

It has been a good tradition for quite a while that we make the intelligence we (Microsoft) have available accessible to the broad public. This will help our customers to protect themselves much better. The Security Intelligence Report (SIR) is built on a unparalleled set of sensors out there on the internet:

  • Malicious Software Removal Tool (MSRT): runs on 450 million computers worldwide each month.
  • BING: performs billions of web-page scans per year.
  • Windows Live OneCare and Windows Defender: on 100 million + computers worldwide.
  • Forefront Online Protection for Exchange: scanning billions of emails yearly.
  • Windows Live Hotmail: 30 + countries - hundreds of millions of active e-mail users.

As there is nobody in the industry who is able to match this, we are convinced that it is of upmost importance that we share our intelligence with the broad industry.

Looking at the report itself, there are a few key findings this time:

  • Rogue Security Software is sill one of the biggest threats for our customers. Even though we found less rogue software on computers (13.4 million computers compared to 16.8 million in H208) it is still a significant threat to the ecosystem.
  • Worms are back: Worms rose from the fifth place to the number 2 with a 98.4% increase. This is largely due to Conficker and Tatef.

To visualise the second point, let’s look at the computers cleaned by threat category:

500x298[1]

 

This is a pretty significant spike.

There are a few diagrams I usually like to look at as well. One is the geographical distribution in order to understand my region. So, let’s look at the malware infections globally:
500x301[1]So, you see there is quite some room for improvement. 

Now, to close this very, very short summary of the report, it is definitely worth looking at two additional graphs. One is the malware distribution per Operating System:

500x320[1] This supports a statement I make so often: If I would have one wish to our customers, it would be: “Always stay on the latest version of all the software you have” – not from a business perspective but from a security view. And the second wish would be, cover all your software, when you do patch management. Remember my post called Patch Management – Cover the whole 9 yards? I told you that you should take care of the whole software stack – not “just” Microsoft. And the reason for that is the following diagram:

500x291[1] As you can easily see, our share in the overall vulnerability landscape is very, very small. So, we need a joint effort across the whole industry to write secure software from the bottom up with processes like the Security Development Lifecycle! And guess what – your problem will not become easier to solve when you move to the cloud.

Now, if you want to read the report, here are the important links:

Have fun

Roger

Posted 02/11/2009 by Roger Halbheer

Tagged under:Security Intelligence,Trends

Comment on this blog

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