A major new industry initiative has been launched at this year’s RSA
Conference Europe, designed to improve the quality and security of software by
promoting and sharing best practices among the vendor community, and engaging
with government and critical infrastructure providers.
SafeCode was announced with founding members Microsoft, EMC, Symantec,
Juniper Networks and SAP. It will attempt to “raise the watermark for improving
security and integrity over time”, according to executive director and former
Cyber Security Industry Alliance (CSIA) head, Paul Kurtz.
The group will comprise two or three committees including one technical in
nature and one which will deal with matters at a public policy level, as well as
action groups to reach out to government, academia and critical infrastructure
providers, to “understand what they want”, he explained.
“It’s not a standards body or a lobbying organisation [but] by promoting the
individual best practices of firms we get the greatest chance to improve overall
best practices,” Kurtz added. “The issue right now is how to triage the problem
and find the most important things to work on together.”
Kurtz wouldn’t be drawn on whether SafeCode was in effect an attempt by the
technology vendor community to pre-empt and prevent potentially heavy-handed
legislation by national governments in the area of software liability.
“There’s been discussion about legislation but a lot has been done by firms
about best practices and we need to be transparent about them with government
and the private sector,” he explained. “Government in an UK and EU context has
said such an organisation [as ours] would be welcome.”
Not everyone was convinced by the new organisation. Analyst Jon Collins
argued that SafeCode needs to accrue a “critical mass” of members before it can
make an impact on the software industry.
“Otherwise the hackers will start targeting those vendors who aren’t members
or who have weaker processes,” he added.
Bruce Schneier, encryption expert and chief technology officer at BT
Counterpane, argued that laws are still needed to enforce vendor liability in
the IT industry. “There will be and has to be legislation,” he added. “It’s pure
economics – we won’t get good software if the vendors aren’t [held
accountable].”
Phil Dunkelberger, chief executive of encryption firm PGP Corporation, argued
that there was a certain amount of fear in the software industry that potential
EU legislation could have forced many software companies to pull out of
investment in the region.
“The struggle the industry has is do you have the well-meaning people
protecting the consumer?” he added. “The flip side is that it turns into
legislation around technology and you don’t want the people who don’t do this
every day making [the decisions].”
He argued that the IT security industry must also “quit making complex IT
problems simple” in order to market their solutions or it will eventually be
found wanting. “All these things go through an evolutionary cycle,” he added.
“The real piece is that what will survive must be manageable, usable and
deployable – when it becomes unusable, people turn it off.”
Lord Erroll, one of the contributors to the recent Lords report on personal
internet security which called for vendor liability, explained that individuals
and organisations need to be incentivised in order to carry out their security
responsibilities. In this way, the Lords’ report recommended that ISPs be able
to track and stop botnets without losing their ‘mere conduit’ immunity.
“The answer is not train and blame but to incentivise people that they could
do something about it,” he added.
Elsewhere, Christopher Kuner, head of the international privacy and
information management practice at lawyers Hunton and Williams said that holding
vendors liable for security flaws in products “could be even more powerful” than
breach notification laws in terms of making stakeholders take security
seriously.
“Whether it’s a bank or a vendor, in the world we live in, there needs to be
basic security built-in to every product,” he added. But I’m sceptical about
going as far [as a law] – it would be hard to establish a standard of car for
building software products.”
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