Newsletters

Select newsletters below and click the button to sign up!

Boston News NY News
DC News Internet Daily
SiliconValley News
InternetNews Business Report




Become a Marketplace Partner



Partner With Us















Internetnews Bloggers

Recent Entries

Archives

August 2009
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31          

Monthly Archives

Search The Blog

Policy Fugue by Kenneth Corbin (bio)

Tracking the loveless marriage of technology and government



Google, groups launching members-only security forum

UPDATED: WASHINGTON -- In the next couple weeks, security researchers, representatives from government agencies and major tech firms such as Google are planning to launch a collaborative security forum to combat malware and fraud on the Web.

The only catch? It's members only.

"This is closed community -- membership needs to be approved by existing members," said Google's Eric Davis, who holds the title of head of anti-malvertising with the search giant.

In addition to Google, the Internet Security Community will draw participation from Microsoft, Cisco, Xerox PARC, representatives of the Federal Trade Commission and others.

Davis made the announcement Wednesday at the FTC's fraud forum, where representatives from Microsoft, eBay and Verizon all stressed the need for partnerships -- both within the IT industry and with law enforcement, associations and others -- in the fight against Internet security threats.

In that spirit, the Internet Security Community aims "to enable people in the private sector, public sector, law enforcement, government security vendors to easily find and share information with trusted contacts," Davis said.

Davis was not a member of the panel discussion at the FTC, but made the announcement as a plant in the audience.

Google is part of the core group developing the site, but the project is launching under the auspices of the Fighting Modern Malware Working Group, an annual security gathering organized by the Santa Fe Institute.

Davis invited interested parties to request membership at iSecComm.org, which redirects to a Google spreadsheet.

Update clarifies Google's role as one of the core members of the group, rather than its leader. From Eric Davis:

"To be clear, this is a joint effort, not a Google project. The Internet Security Community is a project of the Fighting Modern Malware Working Group, a cross-industry group which includes representatives from government agencies like the FTC as well as technology companies like Google, Microsoft, Cisco, and others. Google is contributing to the development of the site, but ultimately it is a collaborative effort."

| Comments (0) | TrackBacks (1) | Share

1 TrackBacks

Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Google, groups launching members-only security forum.

TrackBack URL for this entry: https://swarm.jupitermedia.com/mt-tb.cgi/7527

U.K.'s Minister for Digital Engagement, directs government agencies to adopt open source in new ways while even preferring it over proprietary software in some cases Read More

Leave a comment