[ISN] Microsoft to introduce security certifications

From: InfoSec News (isnat_private)
Date: Wed Jun 04 2003 - 00:37:22 PDT

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    http://www.computerworld.com/securitytopics/security/story/0,10801,81715,00.html
    
    [From The Unknown Security Person...  
    don't people who certify ..  need to be experts themselves?]
    
    
    By CAROL SLIWA 
    JUNE 02, 2003
    Computerworld 
    
    Microsoft Corp. tomorrow will announce its first set of certification
    credentials for IT administrators and engineers who specialize in
    security in a Windows environment.
    
    Dan Truax, director of business and product strategy for training and
    certification at Microsoft, noted that the company has offered
    security courses for years. But he said Microsoft decided to take the
    extra step of creating a formal credential in recognition of the
    number of customers that now specialize in that type of job.
    
    The announcement of the new certifications is scheduled to be made
    during a keynote address by Scott Charney, Microsoft's chief security
    strategist, at the company's TechEd 2003 conference in Dallas.
    
    The more rigorous of the two certifications being introduced is the
    Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer (MCSE): Security on Microsoft
    Windows 2000. To achieve that status, an engineer must pass six core
    exams and demonstrate a "security specialty" by taking a test on
    Microsoft Internet Security and Acceleration (ISA) Server 2000 or an
    exam administered by the Computing Technology Industry Association,
    better known as CompTIA.
    
    The requirements are essentially the same as for an ordinary MCSE
    certification, except the security candidate has to take the core
    security design exam and a security implementation exam that Microsoft
    introduced in January, along with the ISA Server or CompTIA exam.
    
    The other new certification - Microsoft Certified Systems
    Administrator (MCSA): Security on Microsoft Windows 2000 - requires
    the four exams needed for a typical MCSA certification, plus one
    additional exam. One core exam on the client operating system and two
    on networking systems are mandated along with the security
    implementation exam and either the ISA Server or CompTIA exam.
    
    Certifications aren't yet available for Windows Server 2003, but
    they're expected to become available later this year, according to
    Truax.
    
    Truax said Microsoft was first approached last summer about creating a
    special security credential. Customers and partners subsequently
    advised the company not to create credentials similar to any that
    already exist in the industry, but rather to focus on offering a
    certification specific to the Microsoft software environment, he said.  
    "Our goal was to complement what exists in the industry, not to
    compete with it," Truax said.
    
    How important the new certifications will be to IT shops is unclear.  
    Charles Emery, senior vice president and CIO at Horizon Blue Cross
    Blue Shield of New Jersey in Newark, said he views the new Microsoft
    programs as positive for the industry. But he also noted that Horizon
    Blue Cross Blue Shield doesn't use certifications as hiring criteria,
    because it has often found that certification holders have no
    practical experience.
    
    Mike Lines, an Indianapolis-based manager of technical integration at
    Bell Industries Tech.logix Group, said that as a provider of
    outsourced IT services, his company requires all of its engineers to
    carry the MCSE credential. Lines said he definitely will have a couple
    of engineers take the new security certification exams.
    
    But one certified Microsoft trainer, who asked not to be identified,
    said it's difficult for any vendor to develop a security curriculum
    for its own products. He said third parties, such as the SANS
    Institute, tend to take a more critical and thorough approach.
    
    
    
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