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Microsoft opens dedicated cybercrime centre

by Mark Tyson on 15 November 2013, 12:00

Tags: Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT)

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Microsoft has opened a cybercrime centre to combat global computer connected crime. The Microsoft Cybercrime Centre is a 16,800-square foot, high-security facility within the firm’s Redmond campus. The facility brings together security engineers, digital forensics experts and legal experts to help clean the internet of malware, botnets, intellectual property theft and technology-facilitated child exploitation among other crimes.

Cybercrime is acknowledged to be getting worse by Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit chief David Finn. At the opening of the new centre, Finn said Microsoft wants to make the internet “safer for everyone” and described the workings of the new facility; “The Microsoft Cybercrime Center is where our experts come together with customers and partners to focus on one thing: keeping people safe online”. The firm’s mixed approach’ which will use previously proven effective methods such as “massive data gathering and analysis, gumshoe detective work, high-level diplomacy and creative lawyering,” will hopefully be able to make a big impact.

The new centre includes a separate and secure location for third parties to collaborate with Microsoft on current areas of focus or cybercrime hotspots. In this separate wing of the centre cybersecurity experts from around the world can work alongside Microsoft experts for an indefinite period of time, as required by the case at hand.

Noboru Nakatani, executive director of the INTERPOL Global Complex for Innovation praised the Microsoft initiative, “The security community needs to build on its coordinated responses to keep pace with today’s cybercriminals. The Microsoft Cybercrime Centre will be an important hub in accomplishing that task more effectively and proactively.”

With the growth of more sophisticated attacks though distributed means such as botnets it is hoped that the hub created by Microsoft to fight cybercrime could help create the coordinated response required to avoid futile whack-a-mole reactions to criminals on the internet. Let’s look forward to some positive headlines coming from the Microsoft DCU’s latest initiative, with some great results against the bad guys in the coming months.



HEXUS Forums :: 5 Comments

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Cool.
Who's naïve enough to buy this? This is just going to be another group dedicated to intimidating people who download MP3s off the Internet. If they make any sort of effort to stop organized crime or child abusers (and that's a big if) they will be quickly bribed by those groups to keep their activities safely ineffective.

Corporate American does not care about anything but its own bank account balance, and it never will.
The firm’s mixed approach’ which will use previously proven effective methods such as “massive data gathering and analysis, gumshoe detective work, high-level diplomacy and creative lawyering,” will hopefully be able to make a big impact.

Lol. Wonder what “creative lawyering” is.. tbh the whole thing sounds suspect!

Wonder whose fingerprint they put on the wall, also!
I think that something is better than nothing. Anything that will stop some cyber crime must be useful and good for our society.
Who made this bunch of greedy psychotic wacko's a law enforcement agency? First people they should investigate are themselves, as the biggest scam artists and fraudsters on the planet!
Remember the phrase: “If you have done nothing wrong you have nothing to hide” put that in the context of selling out to the NSA and GCHQ with their crap security/backdoor access, didn't exactly make that public knowledge did they?
I'm just waiting for the day someone discovers some Freeware code hidden in early Microsoft software locked down under a proprietary licence and like a woollen jumper with a loose thread you pull it and the whole damned thing falls apart?