Industry Group Tackles Spyware
Consortium readies definition, risk assessments in united effort by leading security firms.
Robert McMillan, IDG News Service
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A new coalition of technology companies and public interest organizations has hit some early milestones in its effort to combat spyware. On Thursday, the Anti-Spyware Coalition published two documents that the group hopes will take the computer security industry a step closer toward setting best practices for stopping this type of annoying and invasive software.
Coalition members have published a definition of the term spyware and are now seeking public comment on a so-called risk modeling document that goes into technical detail about what separates spyware from any other kind of software.
Industry Bumps
Though it has taken only three months to hit these milestones, getting consensus in this area has not always been easy. A similar organization, called the Consortium of Anti-Spyware Technology Vendors, fell apart in February after 16 months of effort.
The Anti-Spyware Coalition's work ultimately will help software vendors build better products that defend against spyware in a more consistent fashion, said Vincent Weafer, senior director with Symantec's Security Response team.
"When we all started looking at the spyware space . . . there was no common definition of what was spyware and what was adware," Weafer said. "It should start to align how companies behave when they look at various types of adware and spyware programs."
Symantec has already begun applying the coalition's definitions to its own products, Weafer said.
Education Effort
The coalition's documents will also help educate users on the subject of spyware, said David McGuire, a spokesman for the Center for Democracy and Technology, another coalition member.
Public comment is now being solicited on the risk-modeling document, and public meetings have been scheduled for Washington, D.C., and Ottawa, Canada, next year to further discuss the spyware problem, McGuire said. "One of the ultimate goals of the coalition is to come up with industrywide best practices," he said.
Other Anti-Spyware Coalition members include Microsoft, which just announced its first corporate antispyware product; Computer Associates International; McAfee; the National Center for Victims of Crime; and the Cyber Security Industry Alliance.
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