[ale] Pentagon and Microsoft
Charles Shapiro
charles.shapiro at nubridges.com
Thu May 23 09:50:36 EDT 2002
This is a Washington Post article on Microsoft's wrangles w/ the
Pentagon re that evil cancerous commie 'free' software thing.
Interesting to watch the brouhaha on this. I reckon M$ wants more USS
Yorktowns...
-- CHS
-- BEGIN included message
To: "nuBridges Develop" <Develop at nubridges.com>
Subject: FW: A washingtonpost.com article from ctycho at bellsouth.net
From: "Kipp Jones" <kjones at nubridges.com>
To: ale at ale.org
Date: Thu, 23 May 2002 09:25:58 -0400
Thread-Index: AcICTwsIU8JXDD1LTkmRe8zIkNdHAAACpiNaAADduiA=
Thread-Topic: A washingtonpost.com article from ctycho at bellsouth.net
Title: A washingtonpost.com article from ctycho at bellsouth.net
Â
Thought this was interesting.
-----Original Message----- From:
register at washingtonpost.com Sent: Thu 5/23/2002 7:35 AM
To: Tycho Howle Cc: Subject: A
washingtonpost.com article from ctycho at bellsouth.net
You have been sent this message from ctycho at bellsouth.net as a
courtesy of the Washington Post (<A
href="http://www.washingtonpost.com">http://www.washingtonpost.com).To
view the entire article, go to <A
href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A60050-2002May22.html">http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A60050-2002May22.htmlOpen-Source
Fight Flares At PentagonBy Jonathan
Krim Microsoft Corp. is aggressively lobbying the
Pentagon to squelch its growing use of freely distributed computer software
and switch to proprietary systems such as those sold by the software giant,
according to officials familiar with the campaign. In what one
military source called a "barrage" of contacts with officials at the Defense
Information Systems Agency and the office of Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld over the past few months, the company said "open source" software
threatens security and its intellectual property. But the
effort may have backfired. A May 10 report prepared for the Defense Department
concluded that open source often results in more secure, less expensive
applications and that, if anything, its use should be
expanded. "Banning open source would have immediate, broad, and
strongly negative impacts on the ability of many sensitive and
security-focused DOD groups to protect themselves against cyberattacks," said
the report, by Mitre Corp. A Microsoft Corp. spokesman
acknowledged discussions between the company and the Pentagon but denied
urging a ban on open-source software. He also said Microsoft did not focus on
potential security flaws. Spokesman Jon Murchinson said Microsoft
has been talking about how to allow open-source and proprietary software to
coexist. "Our goal is to resolve difficult issues that are driving a wedge
between the commercial and free software models," he said. John
Stenbit, an assistant secretary of defense and the Defense Department's chief
information officer, said that Microsoft has said using free software with
commercial software might violate companies' intellectual-property rights.
Stenbit said the issue is legally "murky."Â The company also
complained that the Pentagon is funding research on making free software more
secure, which in effect subsidizes Microsoft's open-source competitors,
Stenbit said. Microsoft's push is a new front in a long-running
company assault on the open-source movement, which company officials have
called "a cancer" and un-American. Software is designated open
source when its underlying computer code is available for anyone to license,
enhance or customize, often at no cost. The theory is that by putting source
code in the public domain, programmers worldwide can improve software by
sharing one another's work. Vendors of the proprietary systems,
such as Microsoft and Oracle Corp., keep their source codes secret,
control changes to programs and collect all licensing fees for their
use. Government agencies use a patchwork of systems and
software, and proprietary software is still the most widely used. But
open source has become more popular with businesses and
government. The Mitre report said open-source software "plays a
more critical role in the DOD than has been generally
recognized."Â The report identified 249 uses of open-source
systems and tools, including running a Web portal for the Defense Intelligence
Agency, running network security for the Army command in Europe and support
for numerous Air Force Computer Network Defense tools. Among the
most high-profile efforts is research funded by the National Security Agency
to develop a more secure version of the open-source Linux operating system,
which competes with Microsoft's Windows. The report said banning
open-source software would drive up costs, though it offered no specifics.
Some government agencies have saved significantly by using open
source. At the Census Bureau, programmers used open-source
software to launch a Web site for obtaining federal statistics for
$47,000, bureau officials said. It would have cost $358,000 if proprietary
software were used, they said. Microsoft has argued that some
free-licensing regimes are antithetical to the government's stated policy that
moneymaking applications should develop from government-funded research and
that intellectual property should be protected. Microsoft also
said open-source software is inherently less secure because the code is
available for the world to examine for flaws, making it possible for hackers
or criminals to exploit them. Proprietary software, the company argued, is
more secure because of its closed nature. "I've never seen a
systematic study that showed open source to be more secure," said Dorothy
Denning, a professor of computer science at Georgetown University who
specializes in information warfare. Others argue that the
flexibility provided by open-source software is essential, enabling users to
respond quickly to flaws that are found. "With open source, there
is no need to wait for a large software firm to decide if a set of changes is
in its best interests," said Eugene Spafford, a computer-science professor at
Purdue University who specializes in security. Jonathan Shapiro,
who teaches computer science at Johns Hopkins University, said: "There is data
that when the customer can inspect the code the vendor is more responsive. . .
. Microsoft is in a very weak position to make this argument. Whose software
is the largest, most consistent source of security flaws? It's
Microsoft."Â Stenbit said that the debate is academic and that
what matters is how secure a given piece of software is. To that end, the
Defense Department is now prohibited from purchasing any software that has not
undergone security testing by the NSA. Stenbit said he is unaware of any
open-source software that has been
tested.Â
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