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Trustworthy computing

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recognized that the rise of the Internet simultaneously increased societal reliance on computer systems while increasing the vulnerability of such systems to failure and produced an important report in 1999, "Trust in Cyberspace". This report reviews the cost of un-trustworthy systems and identifies
220: 113:"...had been under fire from some of its larger customers–government agencies, financial companies and others–about the security problems in Windows, issues that were being brought front and center by a series of self-replicating worms and embarrassing attacks." 217: 134:
Four areas were identified as the initiative's key areas: Security, Privacy, Reliability, and Business Integrity, and despite some initial scepticism, at its 10-year anniversary it was generally accepted as having
227:, a transcript of the March 12, 1992 hearing before the Subcommittee on Science of the Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, U.S. House of Representatives, One Hundred Second Congress, Second Session, Hon. 503: 80:
as Microsoft had not yet developed one. The success of the web had caught them by surprise but by mid 1995, they were testing their own web server, and on August 24, 1995, launched a major
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launched Microsoft's "Trustworthy Computing" initiative with a January 15, 2002 memo, referencing an internal whitepaper by Microsoft CTO and Senior Vice President
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OGC-00-33R Department of Commerce: Relationship with the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers
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On, May 26, 1995, Bill Gates sent the "Internet Tidal Wave" memorandum to Microsoft executives assigning
604: 116: 343: 412: 570: 393: 8: 140: 144: 46: 31: 582: 148: 293: 481: 462: 443: 421: 400: 350: 300: 224: 254: 81: 576: 403:, 1999, final report of the "Committee on Information System Trustworthiness". 268: 598: 180: 228: 108: 128: 85: 77: 104: 73: 368: 318: 243:"Retiring the NSFNET Backbone Service: Chronicling the End of an Era" 50: 27:
Computing systems that are inherently secure, available, and reliable
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Until 1995, there were restrictions on commercial traffic over the
496:"The Business World Owes A Lot To Microsoft Trustworthy Computing" 49:, available, and reliable. It is particularly associated with the 424:, From: Bill Gates Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2002, wired.com. 139:. The Trustworthy Computing campaign was the main reason why 120: 45:) has been applied to computing systems that are inherently 240: 124: 475:"10 years ago today: Bill Gates kicks arse over security" 111:. The move was reportedly prompted by the fact that they 524: 552: 99: 70:"...the Internet this highest level of importance..." 465:, September 19, 2014, Dennis Fisher, Threatpost.com. 579:, Committee on Information Systems Trustworthiness 596: 446:, (revised October 2002 version), Microsoft.com. 211: 527:"Why no Easter Eggs? – Larry Osterman's WebLog" 53:initiative of the same name, launched in 2002. 559:The Age of Corporate Open Source Enlightenment 484:, January 15, 2012, John Leyden, The Register. 437:"Trustworthy Computing, Microsoft White Paper" 314:"Microsoft – The History of Internet Explorer" 137:"...made a positive impact on the industry..." 571:Email from Bill Gates to Microsoft Employees 493: 241:Susan R. Harris; Elise Gerich (April 1996). 173: 555:Managing Trusted Computing Platforms (TPM) 344:"A Brief History of Microsoft on the Web" 432: 430: 567:, Catherine Flick, University of Sydney 449: 14: 597: 565:The Controversy over Trusted Computing 487: 427: 525:Osterman , Larry (21 October 2005). 468: 231:, subcommittee chairman, presiding. 100:Microsoft and Trustworthy Computing 24: 506:from the original on July 29, 2017 199:from the original on June 15, 2009 96:actions required for improvement. 25: 626: 610:Information technology management 541: 269:"A Brief History of the Internet" 414:"Subject: Trustworthy computing" 190:Government Accountability Office 518: 406: 326:from the original on 2005-10-01 275:from the original on 2015-08-11 494:Tony Bradley (March 5, 2014). 387: 356: 337: 306: 286: 261: 234: 161:Security Development Lifecycle 151:and other Microsoft products. 13: 1: 353:, Dave Cramer, Microsoft.com. 166: 7: 573:, Wired News, January, 2002 192:. July 7, 2000. p. 6. 154: 10: 631: 364:"MSN Historical Time line" 56: 29: 591:, Craig Mundie, Microsoft 93:National Research Council 561:, Paul Ferris, ACM Press 531:blogs.msdn.microsoft.com 30:Not to be confused with 548:Trusted Computing Group 294:The Internet Tidal Wave 76:was released without a 615:Microsoft initiatives 589:Trustworthy Computing 583:Trustworthy Computing 394:"Trust in Cyberspace" 39:Trustworthy Computing 18:Trustworthy Computing 218:Management of NSFNET 577:Trust in Cyberspace 253:(4). Archived from 553:Wave Systems Corp. 480:2015-06-26 at the 461:2015-06-26 at the 442:2015-06-26 at the 420:2015-06-26 at the 399:2016-03-04 at the 349:2008-05-14 at the 299:2009-07-15 at the 223:2013-07-28 at the 605:Computer security 143:disappeared from 32:Trusted Computing 16:(Redirected from 622: 535: 534: 522: 516: 515: 513: 511: 491: 485: 472: 466: 453: 447: 434: 425: 410: 404: 391: 385: 384: 382: 381: 372:. Archived from 360: 354: 341: 335: 334: 332: 331: 310: 304: 290: 284: 283: 281: 280: 265: 259: 258: 238: 232: 215: 209: 208: 206: 204: 198: 187: 177: 72:but Microsoft's 21: 630: 629: 625: 624: 623: 621: 620: 619: 595: 594: 544: 539: 538: 523: 519: 509: 507: 492: 488: 482:Wayback Machine 473: 469: 463:Wayback Machine 454: 450: 444:Wayback Machine 435: 428: 422:Wayback Machine 411: 407: 401:Wayback Machine 392: 388: 379: 377: 362: 361: 357: 351:Wayback Machine 342: 338: 329: 327: 312: 311: 307: 301:Wayback Machine 291: 287: 278: 276: 267: 266: 262: 239: 235: 225:Wayback Machine 216: 212: 202: 200: 196: 185: 179: 178: 174: 169: 157: 102: 59: 35: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 628: 618: 617: 612: 607: 593: 592: 586: 580: 574: 568: 562: 556: 550: 543: 542:External links 540: 537: 536: 517: 486: 467: 448: 426: 405: 386: 355: 336: 305: 292:Gates, Bill – 285: 260: 257:on 2015-03-17. 233: 210: 171: 170: 168: 165: 164: 163: 156: 153: 101: 98: 82:online service 58: 55: 26: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 627: 616: 613: 611: 608: 606: 603: 602: 600: 590: 587: 584: 581: 578: 575: 572: 569: 566: 563: 560: 557: 554: 551: 549: 546: 545: 532: 528: 521: 505: 501: 497: 490: 483: 479: 476: 471: 464: 460: 457: 452: 445: 441: 438: 433: 431: 423: 419: 416: 415: 409: 402: 398: 395: 390: 376:on 2005-06-18 375: 371: 370: 365: 359: 352: 348: 345: 340: 325: 321: 320: 315: 309: 302: 298: 295: 289: 274: 270: 264: 256: 252: 248: 244: 237: 230: 226: 222: 219: 214: 195: 191: 184: 183: 176: 172: 162: 159: 158: 152: 150: 146: 142: 138: 132: 130: 126: 122: 118: 114: 110: 106: 97: 94: 89: 87: 83: 79: 75: 71: 66: 64: 54: 52: 48: 44: 40: 33: 19: 530: 520: 508:. Retrieved 499: 489: 470: 451: 413: 408: 389: 378:. Retrieved 374:the original 367: 358: 339: 328:. Retrieved 317: 308: 288: 277:. Retrieved 263: 255:the original 250: 246: 236: 229:Rick Boucher 213: 201:. Retrieved 181: 175: 136: 133: 112: 109:Craig Mundie 103: 90: 69: 67: 60: 42: 38: 36: 585:, Microsoft 510:December 2, 141:Easter eggs 78:web browser 599:Categories 500:Forbes.com 380:2006-07-03 330:2007-02-06 279:2015-06-25 247:ConneXions 167:References 105:Bill Gates 74:Windows 95 369:Microsoft 319:Microsoft 51:Microsoft 37:The term 504:Archived 478:Archived 459:Archived 440:Archived 418:Archived 397:Archived 347:Archived 324:Archived 297:Archived 273:Archived 221:Archived 203:June 25, 194:Archived 155:See also 117:Code Red 115:such as 63:Internet 145:Windows 129:Slammer 57:History 149:Office 47:secure 197:(PDF) 186:(PDF) 121:Nimda 512:2017 205:2015 127:and 125:Klez 91:The 86:MSN 43:TwC 601:: 529:. 502:. 498:. 429:^ 366:. 322:. 316:. 271:. 251:10 249:. 245:. 188:. 147:, 131:. 123:, 119:, 88:. 84:, 65:. 533:. 514:. 383:. 333:. 282:. 207:. 41:( 34:. 20:)

Index

Trustworthy Computing
Trusted Computing
secure
Microsoft
Internet
Windows 95
web browser
online service
MSN
National Research Council
Bill Gates
Craig Mundie
Code Red
Nimda
Klez
Slammer
Easter eggs
Windows
Office
Security Development Lifecycle
OGC-00-33R Department of Commerce: Relationship with the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers
Government Accountability Office
Archived
Management of NSFNET
Archived
Wayback Machine
Rick Boucher
"Retiring the NSFNET Backbone Service: Chronicling the End of an Era"
the original
"A Brief History of the Internet"

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