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In February, a BBC News story suggested that the British government was in discussions with Microsoft over backdoor access to the operating system. A backdoor is a method of bypassing normal authentication to gain access to a computer without to the PC user knowing.
But Microsoft has now quelled the suggestion that law enforcement might get such access.
"Microsoft has not and will not put 'backdoors' into Windows," a company representative said in a statement sent via e-mail.
The discussion centers on BitLocker Drive Encryption, a planned security feature for Vista, the update to the Windows operating system. BitLocker encrypts data to protect it if the computer is lost or stolen.
This feature could make it harder for law enforcement agencies to get access to data on seized computers.
"The suggestion is that we are working with governments to create a back door so that they can always access BitLocker-encrypted data," Niels Ferguson, a developer and cryptographer at Microsoft, wrote Thursday on a corporate blog. "Over my dead body," he wrote in his post titled "Back-door nonsense."
Microsoft is talking to various governments about Vista. However, the talks are about using the new operating system and BitLocker for their own security, Ferguson wrote. "We also get questions from law enforcement organizations. They foresee that they will want to read BitLocker-encrypted data, and they want to be prepared," he wrote.
"Back doors are simply not acceptable," Ferguson wrote. "Besides, they wouldn't find anybody on this team willing to implement and test the back door."
Windows Vista, the successor to Windows XP, is slated to be available by year's end.
See more CNET content tagged:
back door, government, Microsoft Windows Vista, Microsoft Corp., Microsoft Windows




1. Invade another country, without justification.
2. Hold people for years without charges.
3. Beat, humiliate & kill jailed prisoners.
4. Transport people around the world & hand them over to countries that thrive on torture.
5. Tap anyones phone without a court order.
6. Prevent a legitimate trade, on the basis of the color of the skin of the buyer.
7. Act as bad or worse than the "axis of Evil" or whatever imaginary enemy, we are supposed to be "at war" with.
8. Ignore the needs of a US city torn apart by nature.
So why should the government get a backdoor.......OH I KNOW - they don't need one. Vista will transpire to be just as riddled with security breaches that anyone can walk in, any time they want :-(
Fake unrelalistic sex in a video game that kills, rapes, and promotes violence is the only reason it should be banned or given an adult rating. (I like the GTA games by the way. I just find the stink made about the hot coffee mod funny.)
Since we are on Microsoft and the government. Don't forget the Anti-Trust lawsuit the government brought against Microsoft to only then go an support that same monopoly.
At least we aren't China. And that I do mean sincerly. To live in Amercia you have to love the country. You have to love the way of life. However, you don't have to like or love the way it's run. You don't have to support a war to support those fighting in it. And you don't have to stop demanding anwsers just because our elected officals say you do.
people actually protecting this wold. Heck, maybe if we just asked
the terrorists in a nice soothing voice to be good, all would be well.
Get real. You have no idea what it's like (other than watching feel-
good movies).
Punks!
Now, that's what I call defending the constitution and its' right to create laws, as per his oath of office!
With current encumbent at 1600 pennsylvania avenue, unwilling to let little things like treaties, current and past laws to get in his way, anything and everything is now possible!
As Ted Tuner said "the united states has got some of the dumbest people in the world. I want you to know we know that"
Oh well, looks like emperor has already spoken! I suppose we can be grateful that this is his final term by law, but then again given his past and current form, who really knows?
The US government already has all of our information (since we give it to them at taxes, etc), what do we care if MS has it. What could they use it for. They arent that stupid.
The only MS backdoor will be their ability to easily crack your password by some means...nothing new.
pressure.
Now I'll have to get 3rd party firewalls to patch the back door
The idea of BitLocker encryption is to protect your data in the event that your machine is lost or stolen, not if it's comprimised over the network.
Bill Gates - "Security, we have a terrorist on floor 17, you have permission to shoot to kill"
Security team captain - BANG "Target silenced sir"
Steve Ballmer - "But... But... I wanted to throw a chair at him first - you never let me do anything, I hate you!" storms out, comes back, throws a chair at Gates, storms back out...
...Steve drops down on one knee, bows his head, and asks, "What is thy bidding, ...my master?"
...Steve drops down on one knee, bows his head, and asks, "What is thy bidding, ...my master?"
tries to break in while you are gone.
If your windows box is compromised as soon as you access your
encrypted data it is also available to the hacker.
Like the NSA says, you can't trust Windows because you can't
review the code.
Will any of _them_ incorporate a back door?
Premise of story is stupid.
But Microsoft has now quelled the suggestion that law enforcement might get such access.
"Microsoft has not and will not put 'backdoors' into Windows," a company representative said in a statement sent via e-mail.
Joris
CNET News.com
When will you accept backdoors as a part of our society...
http://www.equalrightswashington.org/action/dearmsft.html
Mihai
http://newstalk.media-press-release.com/
-Samiam
- Just plain funny...
- by Gruntington March 19, 2006 9:35 AM PST
- "Never believe anything until it?s officially denied." -- Claud Cockburn
- Reply to this comment
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(39 Comments)The more likely reality is that M$ Windows (all versions) have, from inception, been "guided" by gov't "interests" in regard to back doors for "law enforcement".
SIDE NOTE: "Remember: injustice requires enforcement; just laws need merely be policed." -- Steven M. Barry
Now, the REAL question is...
How many Linux programmers have been bribed...er..."convinced" to install back doors on THEIR distros?
Im betting most of them.
I hear the majority of mainland Chinese users like TurboLinux.
Wonder why?