[ISN] Security firms put up 'Personal Firewall Day'

From: InfoSec News (isn@private)
Date: Thu Jan 15 2004 - 03:29:46 PST

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    http://news.com.com/2100-7349_3-5141196.html
    
    By Robert Lemos 
    Staff Writer, CNET News.com
    January 14, 2004
    
    Straddling the line between public service and marketing, Microsoft
    and a handful of security companies are sponsoring a campaign to
    heighten consumer security awareness and have declared Jan. 15
    "Personal Firewall Day."
    
    The campaign features a Web site hosted by TruSecure, the
    Virginia-based security company whose employee first came up with the
    idea for a consumer-oriented security day. The Web site sports
    vendor-neutral advice for home PC users on how to secure their
    systems.
    
    "If it becomes a perception that the Internet is a dangerous place to
    walk at night, that hurts us all," said Fred Felman, vice president of
    marketing for security software maker Zone Labs, which is a supporter
    of Personal Firewall Day.
    
    Paul Robertson, director of risk assessment with TruSecure and the
    original proponent of the idea, said that safer home systems mean a
    more secure Internet in general.
    
    "The zombies used for DDoS (distributed denial-of-service) attacks and
    the proxy servers that help spammers are all on consumers' home
    machines," he said. "That's the biggest part of the security problem
    on the Internet."
    
    The idea for a consumer-oriented site came to Robertson last summer,
    and since then, he has sold the idea to a number of security companies
    and Microsoft. In addition to TruSecure, the other companies
    supporting the initiative are Sygate, Zone Labs and the McAfee
    security division of Network Associates--which all sell personal
    firewall products.
    
    Despite this, James Schmidt, the product manager for the McAfee
    desktop firewall, said that safety is as important as selling in the
    campaign.
    
    "Maybe you can call this a 'soft sell,' but none of us have set it up
    that way," he said. "There are a lot of people in the world who are in
    the danger zone, because they don't have a firewall. I don't care what
    firewall people buy--though I would love it if it was mine--as long as
    they are protected."
    
    Building defenses
    
    For Microsoft, the move is an extension of its Trustworthy Computing
    Initiative. Personal Firewall Day also marks the second anniversary of
    the memo from Bill Gates expounding the need for more secure products.
    
    While the software giant already has consumer education programs in
    place, another way to get the message out can't hurt, said Debby Fry
    Wilson, director of Trustworthy Computing Security for Microsoft's
    Security Business and Technology Unit.
    
    "We have, for the last six months, been promoting the 'Protect Your
    PC' campaign," she said. "This is an opportunity for us to extend the
    message."
    
    A notable name is missing from the list of sponsors, however.
    
    Despite the fact that Symantec CEO John Thompson had previously called
    for a "Smokey the Bear" type of campaign to heighten awareness of
    security, that maker of security software for home and business users
    is not on the list of sponsors for Personal Firewall Day.
    
    The leading seller of home PC security software in the United States,
    Symantec decided that the focus of Personal Firewall Day is too
    narrow, company spokesman Phil Weiler said.
    
    "While firewalls are important, Symantec believes they are only part
    of a comprehensive security solution," Weiler said. "Antivirus and
    intrusion detection are also necessary to address today's complex
    blended threats."
    
    Moreover, antivirus products are currently a much better seller.  
    Schmidt, of rival Network Associates, estimates that antivirus
    products outsell desktop firewalls by a ratio of 4-to-1. "Antivirus
    software is an easy sell to consumers--they get it," he said. "The
    personal firewall is a bit more difficult."
    
    The new consumer awareness day joins a fast-growing list of
    security-focused anniversaries.
    
    Microsoft, Network Associates and Symantec all support the National
    Cyber Security Alliance, an association of federal agencies and
    industry groups, which promotes a biannual National Cyber Security
    Day. That campaign focuses on the first Sunday in April and the last
    Sunday in October, when people set their clocks to account for
    daylight-saving time and standard time, respectively. Those days are
    also promoted by many fire departments as days to check the battery in
    smoke detectors.
    
    In addition, the educational Computer Security Day, which was launched
    in 1988, falls on Nov. 30.
    
    TruSecure's Robertson hopes that Personal Firewall Day will make it
    onto a few more calendars than Computer Security Day has in the past.  
    "I didn't even know Computer Security Day existed until I started
    proposing this," he said. "It may have not gotten the attention it
    deserves, and maybe it's too broad."
    
    
    
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