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IBM Cracks Web 2.0 Security Concerns with "SMash"
IBM Contributes Secure Mashup Technology to OpenAjax Alliance
Mar. 13, 2008 10:00 AM
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IBM announced new technology to secure "mashups,"
web applications that pull information from multiple sources, such as Web
sites, enterprise databases or emails, to create one unified view. Mashups are
attractive for business use, as they allow non-technical users to gain insight
on complex situations in minutes, but as with all Web-based initiatives,
security has been a concern.
IBM is helping businesses realize the value of these
situational applications without all the risk, through a new technology created
by IBM researchers, codenamed "SMash." Short for secure mashup, this
technology allows information from different sources to talk to each other, but
keeps them separate so malicious code cannot creep into enterprise systems.
In order to give consumer and business users the opportunity
to take advantage of mashup technology, IBM is contributing the SMash
technology to the OpenAjax Alliance. The OpenAjax Alliance is an organization
of vendors, open source projects and companies using Ajax that are dedicated to
the successful adoption of open and interoperable Ajax-based Web technologies.
A founding member of the OpenAjax Alliance, IBM continues to work with the
industry to create standards that will support innovation and wide-spread
adoption of Web 2.0 technologies.
"Web 2.0 is fundamentally about empowering people, and
has created a societal shift in the way we organize, access and use
information," said Rod Smith, IBM Fellow & Vice President.
"Security concerns can't be a complete inhibitor or clients lose out on
the immense benefit mashups bring. The same way you wouldn't buy a car and then
later decide to have the seatbelts or airbags installed, as an industry we've
learned how to build security into business operations from the ground up
instead of tacking it on after the fact."
In February, IBM's prominent X-Force Security Team released
the findings of a report, detailing a disturbing rise in the sophistication of
attacks by cyber criminals on Web browsers worldwide. According to the study,
by attacking a computer user's browser, cyber criminals are able to steal their
identity and control the computer without their knowledge. Additionally, when
attackers invade an enterprise machine, they could steal sensitive company
information or use the compromised machine to gain access to other corporate
assets behind the firewall.
SMash addresses a key part of the browser mashup security
issue by keeping code and data from each of the sources separated, while
allowing controlled sharing of the data through a secure communication channel.
Performance evaluations have shown that SMash can be used in common enterprise
mashup applications. In fact, IBM plans to include SMash technology in select
WebSphere products as well as its commercial mashup maker, Lotus Mashups,
expected in the summer. IBM Lotus Mashups is IBM's first commercial mashup
maker for business, and will allow non-technical users to create and share
mashups in a secure way.
"Each new wave of technology presents new opportunities
for the bad guys to poke holes in the integrity of your business," said
Michael Pinette, board member for the Open Ajax Alliance and VP of Business
Development at Zend Technologies. "The Open Ajax Alliance is thrilled IBM
is donating its SMash technology to the industry to inspire innovation with
less risk."
Future of Secure Web 2.0
To truly empower the Web community, which is an underlying
tenet of this new phase of Web usage and application development, the community
first has to be able to share a common access method to a given application.
IBM recognizes that the ongoing development of standards-based technologies is
a key to enabling more enterprises utilize Web 2.0 technologies.
Mashups provide us with a glimpse into the future of work
and how business will be conducted in the 21st century. IBM is in the best
position to help clients understand the challenges and opportunities that
affect a globally-integrated enterprise. Global integration has become embedded
in IBM's workforce, strategy, leadership and operations -- affecting how the
company collaborates across time zones and cultures and locates its operations,
functions and leadership anywhere in the world based on the right skills and
business environment.
For more information
on IBM contact Alyssa Weir AlyssaW@text100.com at Text 100.
About Web 2.0 News DeskThe Web 2.0 Journal News Desk keeps you up to speed with all that's happening in the world of the read/write Web and all its mushrooming new facets - from tagging, wikis, mash-ups, and image-sharing to "Advertising 2.0," podcasting, and The Writeable Web.