Microsoft
Microsoft's Cofee is designed to offer police and other agencies a way of collecting digital evidence
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

Microsoft Cofee brews 'back door' fears

Gartner welcomes assurances that legal agencies cannot access Microsoft code

Robert Jaques, vnunet.com 09 May 2008
ADVERTISEMENT

Industry experts have welcomed assurances from Microsoft that the firm has not provided law enforcement agencies with a 'back door' into its systems.

Microsoft briefed Gartner on 2 May about its Computer Online Forensic Evidence Extractor (Cofee) USB device that the company began distributing to law enforcement agencies in 2007.

Cofee is designed to offer police and other agencies a way of collecting digital evidence, decrypting passwords and analysing computer and web surfing activity.

The assurances came after reports claiming that Cofee could provide a 'back door' into Microsoft operating systems and applications.

In its Gartner briefing, however, Microsoft stated that Cofee offers nothing more sinister than a set of scripts designed to help law enforcement professionals take a system snapshot.

Microsoft claimed that the commands held on the USB stick are all public, and that no new code has been written and no back doors are present.

"Gartner believes, and Microsoft agrees, that it was a mistake to widely deploy the Cofee initiative without public disclosure and a formal distribution plan," said John Girard, a vice president and distinguished analyst at Gartner.

"We also believe that Microsoft should work closely with professional third-party forensics product and service vendors to develop, manage and track future data capture utility projects.

"Another concern raised by Microsoft's failure to offer public information about this initiative is that the widespread attention it has drawn will likely encourage otherwise well-intentioned enterprise IT personnel to search the internet for penetration tools with which to experiment.

"Enterprises should review their internal protection measures to ensure that their business data is secure and private."

See also:

MicrosoftThree 'critical' fixes expected in monthly update  09 May 2008
MicrosoftLast few places left in UK Challenge  08 May 2008
MicrosoftService Pack 3 reaches automatic update  07 May 2008

All Enterprise Security Technology
Tags: Microsoft

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
Reading, Berkshire, United Kingdom | EDS
Position # 397874 IP Network Administrator Location - Reading Job Description: There is a requirement for an IP network administrator to join the Infrastructure Services operational support team to manage the movement of network resources, ... more >
Telford, Shropshire, United Kingdom | EDS
EDS are currently looking to recruit a PMO Support Analyst to join our Project Management Defence team in Telford, Shropshire. Summary: Within DII Service Management. To perform the PMO function for SM Service Introduction. This ... more >
Reading, Berkshire, United Kingdom | EDS
Position # 395423 Environment Manager Location - Reading, Berkshire Job Description: There is a requirement for an Environmental Manager for the Sandpits environment. This position is to act as the single point of contact for ... more >
London, Haringey, United Kingdom | Haringey Council
PMO Support Officer - Haringey, London - £32,289 - £37,542 pa   Experienced project support officer required by the internal IT services organisation of a London borough council to work within its Programme Management Office ... more >
More job opportunities