Google and Microsoft: The Security Card

April 11, 2011

The source is Microsoft. I don’t know if the information in “Google’s Misleading Security Claims to the Government Raise Serious Questions” is accurate. The tension between Microsoft and Google seems to be increasing. The allegation that Google is behaving like a combination of Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, and Commodore Vanderbilt brightened my blog a few days ago. Now we get Microsoft’s playing the security card.

Powerful stuff and a maneuver that will have to be discussed by the various government decision makers as long as the budget keeps on paying them. Toss in a few assorted blue chip and azure chip consultants, and you have a recipe for investigations, depositions, study groups, and PR excitement. Good news for some I guess.

Here’s a passage I noted:

…Imagine my [Microsoft professional’s] surprise on Friday afternoon when, after some delay, some of the court papers were unsealed, at least in part. There for all to see was a statement by the Department of Justice contradicting Google on one of its basic FISMA claims. The DOJ’s brief says (on page 13) “On December 16, 2010, counsel for the Government learned that, notwithstanding Google’s representations to the public at large, its counsel, the GAO and this Court, it appears that Google’s Google Apps for Government does not have FISMA certification. This revelation was apparently as striking to the lawyers at the Department of Justice as it was to me. The Justice Department brief states “We immediately contacted counsel for Google, shared this information and advised counsel that we would bring this to the Court’s attention.

My view on this matter is that until more information becomes available to me in Harrod’s Creek, the best I can do is assert, “Interesting.”

The impact of the security card is of interest to fewer people than own iPods but ultimately may be more important than some of the other hoo-hah about Google. The notion of stretching security like a rubber sheet may be one of those plays that persist through time. Like a clever chees move from a young Bobby Fischer, specialists may pick up the play and make it a model for young Microsoft emulators to absorb, modify, and use to devastating affect.

Best to be prepared for these sorts of things. Looking back won’t do the job. The security card is a big play.

Stephen E Arnold, April 11, 2011

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Comments

One Response to “Google and Microsoft: The Security Card”

  1. matt mcknight on April 13th, 2011 10:37 am

    it’s more the bureaucratic checkbox play. Google Apps has FISMA accreditation. The added the name Google Apps for Government to describe the particular isolated sets of servers the US Govt stuff will run on, and Microsoft claims they need to reapply for FISMA accreditation, which they have done, despite it just being a different install of the same product. Meanwhile, the microsoft software for which Dept of Interior issued a single vendor RFP that google protested was also lacking FISMA accreditation. It’s all just paperwork, not real security.

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