Mysterious plague hits
Vutures...http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/4/26651.html
MS recruits for Palladium microkernel and/or DRM platform
By John Lettice
Posted: 13/08/2002 at 10:23 GMT
Microsoft's efforts to disassociate Palladium
from DRM seem to have hit their first speed bump. Some voices
within the company (and we currently believe these voices to be right and
sensible) hold the view that Palladium has to be about users'
security if it's to stand any chance of winning hearts and minds, and
that associating it with protecting the music business' IP will be the
kiss of death. So they'll probably not be best pleased by the Microsoft
job ad that seeks a group program manager "interested in being part
of Microsoft's effort to build the Digital Rights Management (DRM) and
trusted platforms of the future (Palladium)."
Oh dear. It's one of a clutch of Palladium job ads currently up on the
site, and is the most blatantly off-message one. While the authors of
Microsoft's discussion white paper on Palladium say, "Palladium will
not require Digital Rights Management (DRM) technology, and DRM will not
require Palladium... They are separate technologies," the author of
this ad continues: "Our technology allows content providers,
enterprises and consumers to control what others can do with their
digital information, such as documents, music, video, ebooks, and
software. Become a key leader, providing vision and industry leadership
in developing DRM, Palladium and Software Licensing products and Trust
Infrastructure Services. If you are looking for an opportunity to get in
on the ground floor of a critical new area for MS and a position with
autonomy and growth, then this is an ideal position."
Content providers controlling their documents, music, video, ebooks, a
critical new area for MS, oh dear oh dear. And we quite liked:
"Additional responsibilities include defining the industry..."
Gosh, the whole industry? That's a responsible job, but we thought
Microsoft was supposed to have given this sort of thing up. The post will
also "include collaboration and technology sharing across CSBU
[Content Security Business Unit, whose bag Palladium is] and with other
MS teams, such as Office, STS, Avalon, CLR, Windows Media Foundation,
eHome, Pocket PC, Mira, MSXML, GXA, and .Net Framework."
There's a handy list of current MS teams for you, people. So Windows
Media is a Foundation now, and what's an Avalon when it's at home,
anyone?
Job two, SDE lead, is much more on message and quite interesting, as it
provides some clues about the way Palladium will be built. "What is
Palladium? We are a windows team working on new, trust-oriented Windows
features, re-architecting and re-developing the Windows PC platform from
the hardware up. We will dramatically enhance the level of Security
available to any customer who wishes to enhance the Privacy, Security,
and Data/Content Protection aspects of their applications. We will offer
customers a very high level of data protection, no matter where they
live, who they are, or what they are trying to protect." Aside from
that Data/Content Protection, it's almost unworrying. Here's the techie
bit:
"Own lean and mean team of 4 senior developers building the very
guts of this new security software. This is one of the very few
opportunities to build a micro-kernel from scratch. We’re keeping
everything that’s cool about a micro-kernel and nothing that’s not.
Responsibilities include: abstraction of hardware from the security modes
of the new CPUs to cryptographic input devices, process control, from
laying out the image in memory, to providing system services, from
providing memory management to interrupt handling, from a debugger to the
fundamentals of structured exception handling. No file system, no
networking, nothing complicated, only elegant. This is a dream job."
Indeed it is. The approach sounds similar to the one the early NT
development team took, before marketing started maiming the thing.
Also wanted is a secure application architect, who "will be
responsible for application strategy and design. The Secure Application
Architect will work with development, marketing and internal and external
customers to identify trusted application scenarios that will be
supported. He/she will then be responsible for executing the strategy:
providing support and guidance for application developers, and working
with the internal Palladium team to ensure that the necessary system
services and infrastructure are in place." So this one could be the
nark. Apply here,
here or
here. ®
Great reversed engineered intelligence from the carrion eaters."I
wanna bite that hand so badly..."Especially after a night and a day
at the Opera.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/4/26645.html
If your using free Opera,you can get rid of the ads with a little
hacking...just don't get caught now its a class A felony.