A Look at Microsoft's Security War Room 199
Josh Fink writes "C|Net has an interesting piece about Microsoft's Security War Room, or rather, shall I say rooms. This room came about when Microsoft's security chief, Mike Nash, had issues finding open conference rooms. The response; a dedicated room only for him and his staff to handle emergencies. "And while he was at it, why not have two? That way, the folks working on fixing a security crisis could have a little breathing room from those drafting the public and customer communications around the issue. ""
on the door? (Score:5, Funny)
No Fighting in the War Room (Score:2)
I imagine a bunker outfitted with state of the are iLoo's and binders labeled "targets in megadeath". Purity of essence!
Re:on the door? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:on the door? W.A.R. Room? (Score:2)
Wide-Area Radioactivity Room
and underneath that sign (Score:3, Funny)
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I have met some VERY competent executives. Great team leaders, which, before anything else, would not get on the way.
Who usually screws things up is middle management.
Re:on the door? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm posting anonymously because of NDA implications. I used to work at a network security firm that supplied MS with a security console for detecting, investigating, and mitigating attacks on their network. (Hint, they use the same one as the Pentagon's network security war room.) This system relied upon certain defacto standards in their networking gear, but MS had purchased gear that did not support that feature, and were blocking much of their gear that did. MS's proposed solution, distribute a few hundred Linux boxes all through their network to serve as probes.
It was an unworkable idea, and we eventually worked around their problems in a different way, but it does indicate that some of the head security guys at MS may not be as opposed to Linux as you'd think. So long as they don't have to make it public, they seem happy to use OSS. Note, the servers that provide their security system run a highly customized version of either OpenBSD or Linux, depending on which version they're using.
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Interesting photo question... (Score:5, Funny)
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I read that as ballmchair joke. :)
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Gentlemen, you can't throw chairs in here! This is the war room!
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Billions of dollars in damages... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Billions of dollars in damages... (Score:4, Funny)
=Smidge=
The cabinets are unlocked (Score:3, Funny)
Can't see... (Score:2, Funny)
From this state of the art bunker... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:From this state of the art bunker... (Score:4, Insightful)
Is he retiring from Microsoft to run for President? He's got the ethics to do so. IMO.
LoB
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- the "mission accomplished" thing is overused and based on an inaccurate assumption. The "mission accomplished" banner was based on that particular ship completing some specific mission (# of deployments or years at sea or something along those lines), and was not a declaration of victory for the overall conflict.
but that's not what your post is about..
i have no reason to pay much attention to what bill gates says about windows releases, but there's nothing intrinsically false about sa
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The "mission accomplished" banner was based on that particular ship completing some specific mission (# of deployments or years at sea or something along those lines), and was not a declaration of victory for the overall conflict.
Yes it was. The other story is just the administration trying to backpedal after it became obvious to them what kind of quagmire we were in.
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(Typing this from my dual boot ubuntu/vista laptop that spends all its time in ubuntu)
Two rooms (Score:5, Funny)
The reason for having a second room... (Score:5, Funny)
Are those liquor bottles? (Score:4, Interesting)
Sounds like a typical geek diet to me.
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Re:Are those liquor bottles? (Score:5, Funny)
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Those are Torani [torani.com] syrups (used to flavor coffee).
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(And where I work, you keep your liquor at your desk, which is where you'll need it most.)
pfft.... (Score:2)
Junk filter? (Score:2)
War rooms... (Score:3, Informative)
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No kidding!
Build enough conference rooms that they're slightly underbooked under normal circumstances -- so space is available for impromptu get-togethers -- and when a real crisis occurs, designate one or more Crisis Managers who have authority to commandeer any conference room for the duration of the crisis, regardless of who may have reserved the rooms.
That explains it! (Score:3, Funny)
Disappointed (Score:5, Interesting)
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Maybe it should just look more like the Bat Cave... WITH the Penguin... and the Joker (can we add Falseface and the Left-Handed Man?).
I say mod parent up to "4" + "Funny"
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That's NORAD, as seen in War Games. You can turn in your geek card on your way out.
(oh, and -1, Whooosh!)
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If you listen to the DVD commentary, the director says he talked to an actual officer who did a stint at NORAD who told him that the movie version was actually very close to the actual version, with the exception that he got the DEFCON colors backwards. (In actual NORAD, DEFCON 5 is peace and 1 is war.) At the time the movie was made, that equipment was all classified. They were allowed to film the NORAD e
24? (Score:2)
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Because you watch too much TV?
Washers (Score:2)
To misquote Dr. Strangelove... (Score:2, Funny)
War Room? More like Scuffle Closet? (Score:5, Funny)
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So now I'm trying to figure out what this has to do with the Filipino Task Force on AIDS
strangelove calling (Score:2)
What a non-story (Score:4, Insightful)
Photoshop? (Score:2, Informative)
Nah... (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:3, Funny)
Obligatory Pulp Fiction reference (Score:2)
(If you don't know what I'm talking about, RTFA
Revolving doors and plenty of Windows (Score:2)
Surely this is redundant nowadays... (Score:2)
or is this just some form of juvenile office politics... look, my meeting must be important, all these people had to drop everything to come to it...
In other news, (Score:2)
I smell a Pulitzer on its way.
Pic? (Score:2)
Also, I have to wonder how wise it is for C|Net to post that picture in light of this article, [slashdot.org] especially since it bears the legend "(C) CNET Networks."
Wrapped in an Enigma (Score:2)
http://www.wolfware.dk/intro/welcome.asp [wolfware.dk]
Two Rooms without a View. (Score:2)
Basically, they separated the urinals from the stalls.
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Really? Unless you're playing the Hollywood Squares variation, where the player with the most squares marked wins in the event neither forms a string of three, I'm not sure I'd agree with this one. Maybe we should play for money - you go first, I win the bet in the event of a draw.
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Glad I did some checking. I had started typing up a response challenging you to ascii-art tic-tac-toe right here on /. I had even made a mention of $50 via PayPal.
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You can find more about it here. http://www.deanliou.com/WinRG/ [deanliou.com]
I didn't paste a link because I don't want to slashdot this guys site. I didn't ask if I could post a link here and I'm sure a lot of people won't copy and past. But load the test program and check it out.
they compile reports like these (Score:2)
Title is wrong (Score:2)
Actually, it's not. Someone obviously screwed up the story. To fix it, just read "war room" as "blood bath".
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Re:war room? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:war room? (Score:5, Informative)
In somebody's defense, they probably just picked up the concept and terminology from large telcos. If you go to a large network operations center (say like what AT&T operates in Piscataway, NJ) you will find two or more good-sized conference rooms provisioned with 10-15 workstations each that sit idle 99 percent of the time. Just used in cases of major outages/problems or sometimes for network upgrades. Known as the "war rooms" for as long as I am aware.
OT: It even extends beyond that (Score:2)
Yet another "war room". And like the parent, I've never heard it called anything else.
Re:war room? (Score:4, Funny)
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To the War Room!
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http://wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=war%20room [princeton.edu]
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The Antarctic, of course. Haven't you seen the Linux mascot?
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Re:reality and spin rooms. (Score:5, Interesting)
That wouldn't make sense at all, there's too much for anyone to grasp. It would be like a dedicated fix team that cover Linux+KDE+OpenOffice. (replace Linux with OpenSolaris or *BSD if you like, KDE with Gnome or some other high-feature window/session/desktop manager if you like)
It's to complex to keep aware of the ins-and-outs of everything - just one of those would be hard enough. Each project should have their own dedicated fix team - The top-string regular devs for the project (hence they understand the code), maybe one or two outsiders (another perspective), who normally work on the specific project, but drop everything and work on fixes if they occur.
Also, it never said that they didn't (or for that matter, did) already have a dedicated team then (or now), simply that until '05, they had to share conference rooms.
Re:reality and spin rooms. (Score:4, Insightful)
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showoff
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I wonder if those two rooms are connected via a corridor, making an 'H' shaped building.
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LoB
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LoB
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...
The Microsoft Security Response Center (MSRC) was completed in June 2005.
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If it walks like a shill, writes like a shill, chances are it is a shill.
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