The NSA (National Security Agency) is funding development of an architecture for a "safer" Internet of Things (IoT), in the hope of incorporating better security at a product's design phase.
The controversial US intelligence agency is bestowing a $299,000, one-year grant to the University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH) for a project that aims to build a lightweight virtualisation architecture which will make it easier to build security into IoT systems before they leave the factory.
There are some interesting reactions to the announcement on the Sophos Naked Security blog.
Why would the NSA invest in a project that would make it harder for them to spy on you?
(Score: 2) by zafiro17 on Thursday August 20 2015, @05:53PM
Best to not get caught up in the semantics of naming. How many recent PACs have had names like "committee for the preservation of liberty and freedom" when in reality all they're doing is funneling money to special-interest congressmen for business interests?
These days, names mean little. They may be for security, but they've interpreted - and been encouraged to interpret - it as a mandate to spy on everyone's every last doing. What they're called and what they do are two different beasts.
I'd be suspect about taking money from them too. Like taking money from the devil or something. Yes, we all want our internet-enabled refrigerators secure, but the NSA has given us very real reasons to believe they'll be looking for zero-days that turn our refrigerators into recording devices or something else consumer-unfriendly.
Dad always thought laughter was the best medicine, which I guess is why several of us died of tuberculosis - Jack Handey
(Score: 2) by HiThere on Thursday August 20 2015, @07:10PM
They aren't monolithic. It's not totally unreasonable that some division within the NSA is actually funding real security. The problem is, you can never be sure that it's not the spys pretending to be good guys, and they've so manipulated the laws (see NSL) that to count on them being helpful is folly.
Javascript is what you use to allow unknown third parties to run software you have no idea about on your computer.
(Score: 2) by zafiro17 on Friday August 21 2015, @05:14AM
You get ten points for having
a sig. that basically coMplements your post,
Dad always thought laughter was the best medicine, which I guess is why several of us died of tuberculosis - Jack Handey