RSA Opening Keynoters
- By John K. Waters
- February 14, 2006
The sun had barely cleared the hills on this unseasonably
warm Valentine's Day morning when hundreds of RSA 2006 Conference
attendees and
dozens of reporters began queuing outside the San Jose Civic Auditorium,
backpacks bulging and lattes steaming, hoping for a good seat--any seat--at Bill
Gates's conference-opening keynote.
This is the third year in a row that Microsoft's chairman and chief software architect has kicked
off the annual RSA show. He spoke to the packed auditorium
about his company's security agenda in broad terms, highlighting some security
features of the upcoming Windows Vista OS.
His presentation also included the first public demo of
Microsoft's InfoCard identification and authentication services, which Gates and
company are proposing as a replacement for existing password systems. Gates sees
passwords as the ''weak link'' in the ''trust ecosystem,'' and he argued for a trust-based, multifactor authentication systems.
Gates said InfoCard will be delivered as part of
WinFX, Microsoft's managed code programming model, and will support Internet Explorer
7 on Vista, Windows XP Service Pack 2, and Windows Server 2003 Service
Pack 1 and R2.
He also talked about the problem of complexity in the current crop of
security systems. He acknowledged that his own company had room improvement in
this area. ''If you look at the security systems that are out there,'' he said,
''we are not achieving simplicity. The number of things people have to keep
track of is probably an order of magnitude more than it needs to be. If there's
an area where we absolutely have to do dramatically better, this is it.''
Gates is definitely getting funnier with age. He delivered a pretty good joke
during his intro: ''My other invitation was to go quail hunting with Dick
Cheney.' he said. 'I'm feeling very safe now.''
Okay, not that much funnier.
But it was a nice set up for Sun Microsystems CEO Scott McNealy, who gave the
third keynote of the morning and gleefully used Gates's quip about the Vice
President's hunting accident to take a shot of his own at Sun's
rival-cum-partner from Redmond.
''He [Gates] forgot to mention my invitation to go duck hunting with him,''
McNealy said. The line got a big laugh.
I hate to sound like a theater critic, but McNealy was really on
today. Gone was the goofy crankiness that has informed so
many of his recent interactions with the public. He riffled through the infomercial
stuff at the end, but the bulk of his speech was an
actual keynote focused on the security role of open-source software in an increasingly recorded,
monitored, and networked world.
Some highlights:
- McNealy cited a staggering statistic (390 gigs of
content created every second) to underscore the literal size of the data-protection
challenge. ''At some point, you're just going to put your cell phone in your pocket
facing out and do a full motion video chronicle and archive of your day,'' he
said. ''There's nothing that isn't captured today. And it's going to be a scary
world if we don't come up with technology and rules to appropriately protect
privacy and secure the data we value.''
- He talked about the digital divide, a term we don't hear that often
these days, and the importance of bridging it. ''If we add several million
people a week through 2007, we'll still have three out of four people on the
planet not connected to the Internet,'' he said. ''We won't bridge the digital
divide if we don't solve the security, privacy, and conditionally access
issues...''
- Best line: ''I've always argued that the computer industry is more screwed
up than any industry in the world, except health care, which kills everybody
eventually. So the bar is fairly low.''
- He talked about a ''crisis on the desktop and the server.' On the server
side are ''Frankensteins'' created from multivendor ''body parts.'' ''You have
87 suppliers, half of whom have been bought by Oracle recently, and a third who
have gone out of business, and you wonder why you have security problems.'' On
the client side are the desktop 'Dollys,' a reference to the famous cloned
sheep. ''There's not enough genetic diversity on the desktop. That's driven by
the desktop monopoly.''
- Another problem: ''Technology has the shelf life of a banana,'' he
said. ‘‘When you buy software from us or anybody, my basic assumption is that
it'll be obsolete within six months, or maybe even before you can install it.''
Proprietary environments, he added, create what amount to ''barriers to exit,''
that prevent companies from moving forward, and inhibit the adoption of the
latest security technologies.''
The solution? ''We believe that the way this is going to be solved is by
creating communities, open interfaces, open implementations of open software,
and community development,'' he said. That remark drew applause.
I even liked the latest edition of his very long-in-the-tooth Top-10 List. This
time the subject was ''Top Scurity Mnagers' Nghtmares:''
10. First line of defense is to pull the power plug.
9. Worn-out CTRL+ALT+DEL keys.
8. Wearing an orange jumpsuit for the next five to seven years.
7. You just got a new job at an all-Microsoft shop.
6. Laptops.
5. You're the only one who opens funnybunny.exe
4. Company policy allows root-level access for all.
3. Blue Screen of Death.
2. Being told there's a patch to patch.
1. Having a virus named in your honor.
Now that's funny.
Self indulgent non-sequitur: Okay, what's with the sweaters? Both Gates and McNealy sported what I've
begun to think of as The Executive Pullover (gray and red, respectively). I have
nothing against business casual; I thank God and the young hippie Steve
Jobs every morning that I don't have to thread a necktie into the cramped space
between my head and shoulders where most people have a neck. And I'm sure that
these two high-powered execs couldn't care less about their wardrobes. I'm just
wondering about the message the image consultants are tying to send with these
outfits. I mean, they looked like dueling Mr. Rogerses.
###
About the Author
John K. Waters is a freelance writer based in Silicon Valley. He can be reached
at [email protected].