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04 April 2008
Microsoft joins MIT Kerberos Consortium
John Sterlicchi US Bureau Chief
Microsoft has joined the MIT Kerberos Consortium as a founding sponsor,
joining Sun Microsystems, Google and Apple on the consortium’s
executive board.
Slava Kavsan, director of development for Windows Core Security
at Microsoft, will take a seat on the executive board.
“Microsoft has always been committed to interoperability
of our authentication protocols and Kerberos’ universal authentication
platform is of strategic importance for Microsoft and our customers,”
Kavsan said. “We are proud to join the MIT Kerberos Consortium
as a founding sponsor.”
MIT’s Stephen Buckley, executive director of the Kerberos
Consortium, said MIT and Microsoft have a long history of working
together.
“Microsoft joining the Kerberos Consortium is significant,”
Buckley said. “They represent a vast number of users of Kerberos
and it is an important step forward towards our common ambition
to create a universal authentication platform.”
Kerberos is a network authentication protocol, originally developed
for MIT’s Project Athena in the 1980s. It has grown to become
the most widely deploy system for authentication and authorization
in modern computer networks.
Microsoft has implemented the Kerberos protocol in a number of
its products including Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows Server
2003, Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008.
Tom Kemp, chief executive of security software vendor Centrify
Corporation noted on his blog that this is significant for a number
of reasons.
“As a founding sponsor of the Kerberos Consortium, Centrify
is pleased to be able to get a up close pulse on the direction of
Kerberos, collaborate with these other large vendors regarding interoperability,”
he wrote.
Kemp asked so why does Microsoft even care about Kerberos? “Because
starting with Windows 2000, Microsoft bundled Kerberos as part of
the Windows platform, with Active Directory domain controllers not
only supporting LDAP but also playing the part of a Key Distribution
Center.”
“Because Kerberos is turned on and utilized by default in
the Windows platform, clearly the Windows platform represents a
huge chunk of the systems actively running Kerberos,” Kemp
noted. “As we all know there are many out there that like
to beat up Microsoft regarding security, but it is ironic that Microsoft
by default delivers the added security of Kerberos as part and parcel
of the Windows platform.”
The MIT Kerberos Consortium was officially launched in September
2007 with the support of Apple, Centrify, Google, Sun, Stanford
University, TeamF1 and the University of Michigan.
Additional sponsors include NASA, the US Department of Defense,
Duke University and Carnegie Mellon University.
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