When Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer steps down in the next
12 months, his successor will be left with the task of easing rising
privacy concerns fueled by reports of massive Internet snooping by the
U.S. National Security Agency.
Ballmer announced
his plans for retirement on Friday, saying the company needed someone
who would be with Microsoft long enough to see through its transition
from a software maker to a "devices and services" business.
The next CEO will have to provide a much better strategy than Ballmer
on moving Microsoft into the fast-growing tech markets Ballmer missed
early on, including the shift in Internet advertising to search and the
movement from PCs to tablets and smartphones.
On top of all that, the new top executive will have to guide the
company in mistrustful overseas markets shaken by the steady stream of
media reports of NSA Internet data gathering.
In the latest fallout from the NSA's terrorist-hunting, the German national weekly newspaper Die Zeit reported that experts are warning the government not to use Windows 8 or its successor because they contain a backdoor that could be exploited by the U.S. agency.
Ironically, the offending technology, called Trusted Computing, is
the foundation for a much higher level of security than what has existed
in Windows PCs in the past.
What Microsoft has done is link the operating system to a special
chip called a Trusted Platform Module. Working together, the
technologies provide Microsoft a protected channel for automatic
updating and monitoring for software piracy.
Specifications for the architecture come from the Trusted Computing
Group, a non-profit organization whose members include the biggest names
in the U.S. tech industry, including Microsoft, IBM, Cisco,
Hewlett-Packard and Intel.
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