/?pid=1589

Updated:11:18 AM EST Jan 09


this is ggmania.com subsite Symantec Still Upset Over Microsoft's Security Approach in Vista - TechAmok

Symantec Still Upset Over Microsoft's Security Approach in Vista - [security]
04:54 AM EDT - Oct,13 2006 - post a comment

Symantec is still crying foul over Microsoft's decision to lock anti-virus vendors out of the Windows Vista kernel. Last week, McAfee has thrown down the gauntlet in its dispute with Microsoft's decision to lock down the core of their Vista operating system. The security software vendor has a full-page ad in today's Financial Times which berates Microsoft. Now, Symantec is going even further by saying that Microsoft needs to provide a "level playing field" for security vendors and give them equal access to the Vista kernel. "We want the same access to the operating system as their engineers and developers. Let us integrate - we can do a better job of integrating security than Microsoft can," said Jeremy Button of Symantec's security and data management group. While McAfee and Symantec aren't too happy about the current state of affairs with Windows Vista, Russian-based Kaspersky Labs has rushed to Microsoft's defense. "It would not make any sense for them (Microsoft) to stop working with other computer security companies because it would make their system more vulnerable to attacks," said Kaspersky Lab Chief Executive and co-founder Natalya Kaspersky. For those that want to take a deeper look at Kernel PatchGuard, you can take a look at this MSDN blog post:
There are many brand new security features in Windows Vista, but Kernel Patch Protection is actually not one of them. Kernel Patch Protection was first supported on x64 (AMD64 and Intel EMT64T) CPU architecture versions of Microsoft Windows including Microsoft Windows Server 2003 SP1 and Windows XP Microsoft Windows XP Professional x64 Edition. (Patch protection is currently not supported on x86 or ia64 architectures.) Though, as the use of 64-bit computers is increasing, Windows Vista users will end up benefiting most from this technology. Kernel Patch Protection monitors if key resources used by the kernel or kernel code itself has been modified. If the operating system detects an unauthorized patch of certain data structures or code it will initiate a shut down of the system.

Kernel Patch Protection does not prevent all viruses, rootkits, or other malware from attacking the operating system. It helps prevent one way to attack the system: patching kernel structures and code to manipulate kernel functionality. Protecting the integrity of the kernel is a fundamental steps in protecting the entire system from malicious attacks and from inadvertent reliability problems that result from patching.


Add your comment (free registrationrequired)

Short overview of recent news articles

Jan,09 2026 GOOD LUCK, HAVE FUN, DON'T DIE Trailer 2 (2026) Sam Rockwell
Jan,07 2026 NVIDIA Releases GeForce 591.74 WHQL Drivers with DLSS 4.5 Support
Jan,07 2026 Predator: Badlands Exclusive Deleted Scene (2025)
Jan,06 2026 Greenland 2: Migration - Official Trailer 3 (2026) Gerard Butler,
Jan,05 2026 The Best Laptops of 2025 - For Gaming, Creators & Students!
Jan,05 2026 Punkt Updates its Privacy-Focused Smartphone
Jan,05 2026 Clicks Launches New Ways to Add a Physical Keyboard to Your Life
Jan,05 2026 Building a PC for the First Time
Jan,03 2026 Building a PC in 2026
Jan,02 2026 I want this phone so bad... - Samsung Galaxy Z TriFold
Jan,02 2026 The Real Finewine Strikes Again: Ryzen 5600X, 5700X & 5800XT Revisit
Jan,02 2026 Nokia N8 Symbian Re-Awakened With Passion
Jan,02 2026 Europe Forces Apple to Open up More of iOS
Jan,02 2026 Must have Privacy and Security Tweaks: 2026 Edition
Jan,01 2026 How Did RAM Get So Expensive?!
Dec,31 2025 GeForce RTX 5090 prices to soar to $5,000 as NVIDIA and AMD prep GPU
Dec,30 2025 Hacker arrested for KMSAuto malware campaign with 2.8 million
Dec,29 2025 Killer Whale - Official Trailer (2026) Virginia Gardner, Mel
Dec,28 2025 NVIDIA Showed Me Their Supercomputer
Dec,28 2025 2026 CPU Launches! AMD, Intel & NVIDIA: Buy Now or Wait?
Dec,27 2025 Disable this Windows Feature that Secretly Eats Up RAM!
Dec,27 2025 New Windows 11 vs Old Malware: Will it survive?
Dec,27 2025 Samsung TriFold Durability Test: We found the limit
Dec,26 2025 TRUST WALLET CONFIRMS SECURITY BREACH
Dec,26 2025 Xiaomi 17 Ultra Leads And Samsung To Follow With A 10 Percent Price
Dec,25 2025 Merry Christmas Gaming Insanity
Dec,24 2025 Battlefield 6 - Official PS5 Features Trailer
Dec,24 2025 NVIDIA GeForce Hotfix Driver 591.67 Released
Dec,23 2025 Finally! A Battery That's Better Than Energizer and Duracell!
Dec,22 2025 NVIDIA Killing Cheap 16GB Local AI GPUs?
Dec,21 2025 Top 10 Movie Sequels of All Time
Dec,21 2025 He Built a Privacy Tool. Now He's Going to Prison (Kone Rodriguez,
Dec,20 2025 Insane Moves! B-Boy Shigekix vs. B-Boy Issin - Red Bull BC One World
Dec,20 2025 9800X3D & RTX 5070 Ti Gaming PC - MSI Project Zero Done Right
Dec,19 2025 The XG27AQWMG Sets a New Standard for 1440p OLED
Dec,19 2025 OnePlus 15R Boasts Huge 7,400 mAh Battery
Dec,19 2025 Motorola Refreshes moto g power for 2026
Dec,18 2025 NVIDIA GeForce 591.59 WHQL Driver
Dec,18 2025 Are We Quitting YouTube Due To DRAM Apocalypse?
Dec,16 2025 The Samsung TriFold is AWESOME!
>> News Archive <<

TechAmok - Privacy Policy        loading time:0.01secs