[tags]obituary,cryptography,Bob Baldwin,kuang, CBW,crypt-breaker's workbench[/tags]
I learned this week that the information security world lost another of our lights in 2007: Bob Baldwin. This may have been more generally known, but a few people I contacted were also surprised and saddened by the news.
His contributions to the field were wide-ranging. In addition to his published research results he also built tools that a generation of students and researchers found to be of great value. These included the Kuang tool for vulnerability analysis, which we included in the first edition of COPS, and the Crypt-Breaker's Workbench (CBW), which is still in use.
What follows is (slightly edited) obituary sent to me by Bob's wife, Anne. There was also an obituary in the fall 2007 issue of Cryptologia.
Robert W Baldwin
May 19, 1957- August 21, 2007
Robert W. Baldwin of Palo Alto passed away at home with his wife at his side on August 21, 2007. Bob was born in Newton, Massachusetts and graduated from Memorial High School in Madison, Wisconsin and Yorktown High School in Arlington, Virginia. He attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received BS and MS degrees in Computer Science and Electrical Engineering in 1982 and a Ph.D. in Computer Science in 1987. A leading researcher and practitioner in computer security, Bob was employed by Oracle, Tandem Computers, and RSA Security before forming his own firm, PlusFive Consulting. His most recent contribution was the development of security engineering for digital theaters. Bob was fascinated with cryptology and made frequent contributions to Cryptologia as an author, reviewer, and mentor.
Bob was a loving and devoted husband and father who touched the hearts and minds of many. He is well remembered by his positive attitude and everlasting smile. Bob is survived by his wife, Anne Wilson, two step-children, Sean and Jennifer Wilson of Palo Alto and his two children, Leila and Elise Baldwin of Bellevue, Washington. He is also survived by his parents, Bob and Janice Baldwin of Madison, Wisconsin; his siblings: Jean Grossman of Princeton, N.J., Richard Baldwin of Lausanne, Switzerland, and Nancy Kitsos of Wellesley, MA.; and six nieces and nephews.
In lieu of flowers, gifts in memory of Robert W. Baldwin may be made to a charity of the donor's choice, to the Recht Brain Tumor Research Laboratory at Stanford Comprehensive Cancer Center, Office of Medical Development, 2700 Sand Hill Road, Menlo Park, CA 94025, Attn: Janice Flowers-Sonne, or to the loving caretakers at the Hospice of the Valley, 1510 E. Flower Street. Phoenix, AZ 85014-5656.

On November 18, 2007, noted computer pioneer James P. Anderson, Jr., died at his home in Pennsylvania. Jim, 77, had finally retired in August.
Jim, born in Easton, Pennsylvania, graduated from Penn State with a degree in Meteorology. From 1953 to 1956 he served in the U.S. Navy as a Gunnery Officer and later as a Radio Officer. This later service sparked his initial interest in cryptography and information security.
Jim was unaware in 1956, when he took his first job at Univac Corporation, that his career in computers had begun. Hired by John Mauchly to program meteorological data, Dr. Mauchly soon became a family friend and mentor. In 1959, Jim went to Burroughs Corporation as manager of the Advanced Systems Technology Department in the Research Division, where he explored issues of compilation, parallel computing, and computer security. While there, he conceived of and was one of the patent holders of one of the first multiprocessor systems, the D-825. After being manager of Systems Development at Auerbach Corporation from 1964 to 1966, Jim formed an independent consulting firm, James P. Anderson Company, which he maintained until his retirement.
Jim's contributions to information security involved both the abstract and the practical. He is generally credited with the invention and explication of the reference monitor (in 1972) and audit trail-based intrusion detection (in 1980). He was involved in many broad studies in information security needs and vulnerabilities. This included participation on the 1968 Defense Science Board Task Force on Computer Security that produced the "Ware Report", defining the technical challenges of computer security. He was then the deputy chair and editor of a follow-on report to the U.S. Air Force in 1972. That report, widely known as "The Anderson Report", defined the research agenda in information security for well over a decade. Jim was also deeply involved in the development of a number of other seminal standards, policies and over 200 reports including BLACKER, the TCSEC (aka "The Orange Book"), TNI, and other documents in "The Rainbow Series".
Jim consulted for major corporations and government agencies, conducting reviews of security policy and practice. He had long- standing consulting arrangements with computer companies, defense and intelligence agencies and telecommunication firms. He was a mentor and advisor to many in the community who went on to prominence in the field of cyber security. Jim is well remembered for his very practical and straightforward analyses, especially in his insights about how operational security lapses could negate strong computing safeguards, and about the poor quality design and coding of most software products.
Jim eschewed public recognition of his many accomplishments, preferring that his work speak for itself. His accomplishments have long been known within the community, and in 1990 he was honored with the NIST/NCSC (NSA) National Computer Systems Security Award, generally considered the most prestigious award in the field. In his acceptance remarks Jim observed that success in computer security design would be when its results were used with equal ease and confidence by average people as well as security professionals - a state we have yet to achieve.
Jim had broad interests, deep concerns, great insight and a rare willingness to operate out of the spotlight. His sense of humor and patience with those earnestly seeking knowledge were greatly admired, as were his candid responses to the clueless and self-important.
With the passing of Jim Anderson the community has lost a friend, mentor and colleague, and the field of cyber security has lost one of its founding fathers.
Jim is survived by his wife, Patty, his son Jay, daughter Beth and three grandchildren. In lieu of other recognition, people may make donations to their favorite charities in memory of Jim.
[Update 01/03/2008 from Peter Denning:]
I noted a comment that Jim is credited with the reference monitor. He told me once that he credits that to a paper I wrote with Scott Graham for the 1972 SJCC and said that paper was the first he'd seen using the actual term. I told him that I got the concept (not the term) from Jack Dennis at MIT. Jack probably got it from the ongoing Project MAC discussions. Where it came from before that, I do not know. It might be better to say that Jim recognized the fundamental importance of reference monitor for computer security practice and stumped endlessly for its adoption.
[posted with ecto]
"it is a safe format. Unlike Word documents and PDF files, which can contain macros and JavaScript respectively, XPS files are fixed and do not support any embedded code. The inability to make documents that can literally change their own content makes this a preferable archive format for industries where regulation and compliance is a way of life" [8].Despite being an open specification, there is no support for it yet in Linux. Visiting Microsoft's XPS web site and clicking on the "get an XPS viewer" link results in the message "This OS is not supported". It seems, however, that Microsoft may be just as intent on keeping control of XPS as Adobe for PDFs; the "community promise for XPS" contains an implicit threat should your software not comply "with all of the required parts of the mandatory provisions of the XPS Document Format" [9]. These attached strings negate some advantages that XPS might have had over PDFs. XPS must become supported on alternative operating systems such as Linux and BSDs, for it to become competitive. This may not happen simply because Microsoft is actively antagonizing Linux and open source developers with vague and threatening patent claims, as well as people interested in open standards with shady lobbying moves and "voting operations" [10] at standards organizations (Microsoft: you need public support and goodwill for XPS to "win" this one). The advantages of XPS may also not be evident to users comfortable in a world of TeX, postscript, and no-charge PDF tools. The confusion about open formats vs open standards and exactly how much control Adobe still has and will still have when and if PDF becomes an ISO standard does not help. Companies offering XPS products are also limiting their possibilities by not offering Linux versions, at least of the viewers, even without support. In conclusion, PDF viewers have become risky examples of mixed loyalty software. It is my personal opinion that risk-averse industries and free software enthusiasts should steer clear of the PDF standard, but there are currently no practical replacements. XPS faces extreme adoption problems, not simply due to the PDF installed base, but also due to the ill will generated by Microsoft's tactics. I wish that DVI was enhanced with included fonts and images, better portability, and better integration within tools like OpenOffice, and that this became an often requested feature for the OpenOffice folks. I don't expect DVI handlers to be absolutely perfect (e.g., CVE-2002-0836), but the reduced feature set and absence of certain attack vectors should mean less complexity, fewer risks and greater loyalty to the computer owner. 1. ISS, Multiple vendor products URI handling command execution, October 2007. http://www.iss.net/threats/276.html 2. Robert Daniel, Adobe-Yahoo plan places ads on PDF documents, November 2007. http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/adobe-yahoo-partner-place-ads/story.aspx?guid=%7B903F1845-0B05-4741-8633-C6D72EE11F9A%7D 3. Bogdan Popa, Yahoo Infects Users' Computers with Trojans - Using a simple advert distributed by Right Media, September 2007. http://news.softpedia.com/news/Yahoo-Infects-Users-039-Computers-With-Trojans-65202.shtml 4. Kurt Foss, Web site editor illustrates how Mac OS X can circumvent PDF security, March 2002. http://www.planetpdf.com/mainpage.asp?webpageid=1976 5. Nate Mook, Microsoft to Drop PDF Support in Office, June 2006. http://www.betanews.com/article/Microsoft_to_Drop_PDF_Support_in_Office/1149284222 6. Adobe Press release, Adobe to Release PDF for Industry Standardization, January 2007. http://www.adobe.com/aboutadobe/pressroom/pressreleases/200701/012907OpenPDFAIIM.html 7. Eric Schechter, Free TeX software available for Windows computers, November 2007. http://www.math.vanderbilt.edu/~schectex/wincd/list_tex.htm 8. Jonathan Allen, The wide ranging impact of the XML Paper Specification, November 2006. http://www.infoq.com/news/2006/11/XPS-Released 9. Microsoft, Community Promise for XPS, January 2007. http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/xps/xpscommunitypromise.mspx 10. Kim Haverblad, Microsoft buys the Swedish vote on OOXML, August 2007. http://www.os2world.com/content/view/14868/1/