INTERVIEW: Vincent Weafer, Symantec's chief virus hunter
Connecting state and local government leaders
In 1998, when Vincent Weafer became director of Symantec Corp.'s AntiVirus Research Center, about 200 pieces of suspicious code arrived that year for examination.
Vincent Weafer
In March of this year the center received more than 50,000 submissions of malicious code. Its Web site, at www.symantec.com/avcenter, ranks security risks from viruses, provides advisories and updates, and exposes hoaxes.
The rapidly growing threat from viruses, worms and Trojan horses, however, is no hoax. The center evaluates the seriousness of malicious code and helps develop responses for the Cupertino, Calif., company's Norton AntiVirus products.
Weafer, a native of Ireland, joined Symantec in 1994 and helped develop Japanese versions of Norton Desktop and Norton Utilities at the company's Dublin localization group. He also managed the international product engineering and development teams.
Weafer holds a bachelor's degree in electronic engineering from Dublin City University in Ireland. He received an international managerial and technical scholarship to Japan, where he lived from 1984 to 1986.
GCN senior editor William Jackson spoke with Weafer by telephone about the center's work.
GCN:How does the Antivirus Research Center collect its examples of malicious code?
WEAFER:
GCN:How long before wireless devices become significant vectors?
WEAFER:
GCN:How do you differentiate a virus, a worm and a Trojan horse?
WEAFER:
GCN:How do you gauge the severity of a threat?
WEAFER:
GCN:Are the high-profile ones more of a threat than before?
WEAFER:
GCN:Is broadband changing the nature of risks?
WEAFER:
GCN:How does the government rate in protecting itself?
WEAFER:
GCN:Is there any useful profile of who is creating and releasing malicious code?
WEAFER:
GCN:How big a problem is so-called hacktivism, or social and political activism?
WEAFER:
GCN:What are the latest trends in malicious code?
WEAFER:
GCN:Are software developers doing enough to provide safe products?
WEAFER:
GCN:Some hackers maintain that the only way to ensure vulnerabilities are fixed is to publicize and even develop exploits for them. Do you see any merit in that view?
WEAFER:
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