Song and her research team aren't looking to simply patch holes in the Internet that online baddies are constantly trying to penetrate. She takes a more holistic approach, designing technology tools that can act as building blocks for an overall secure computing experience -- on any device. The proliferation of smartphones and tablets means more people are trying to share sensitive information via the public Internet instead of private networks, a practice that makes Song shudder. "If I have uploaded my data naively into the cloud, the best I can do now is cross my fingers and hope that whoever is storing my data is doing a good job with their security," she says.
Song's hope is that BitBlaze, WebBlaze, and her privacy initiatives become fundamental Internet tools that are deployed when any person or company builds a new cloud-based service or overhauls an existing one. Her team is working on commercial versions of the security platforms that would offer custom analysis to paying customers.
Song is no fear monger, but she stresses that the risks are mounting as everything -- phones, tablets, even wireless health-monitoring gadgets -- gets connected to the web. "We are always playing catch-up," she admits. But if Song and her team are successful, consumers and companies won't have to simply keep their fingers crossed -- and she may even put a few of those ponytailed security experts out of business.
source: cnn
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