
Most everyone loves Thanksgiving turkeys. But IT industry turkeys? Not so much. We look at 10 examples of 'turkeys' that have disappointed the tech industry this year.
Colin Powell, former Secretary of State. Powell's natural positions in the Obama administration, State of Defense, are already taken for the time being. But the four-star general delivered arguably the most impactful endorsement of Obama in the presidential campaign, and there's considerable motivation to find a spot for him in the chain of command. Cybersecurity isn't exactly his bailiwick -- and the position would represent a major step down for Powell -- but what if he were to help build up the proposed National Office for Cyberspace (NOC) while Robert Gates keeps his seat warm over at the Defense Department? Ted "Series of Tubes" Stevens probably has a more viable shot at this job, but what's a list without at least one wild, off-base speculation?
THE ALL-AROUND THREAT
Padmasree Warrior, CTO of Cisco Systems. The naming of Warrior, also floated as a potential candidate for Obama's proposed CTO job, would place a South Asian in a prominent position in the Obama White House. Warrior's resume goes much deeper than that, of course -- in her top-level roles at Motorola and Cisco, she's built and sold solutions touching the wide range of technologies and markets comprising cyberspace, from telecommunications and networking infrastructure to silicon manufacturing and software development.
THE TOUGH GUY
Stephen Northcutt, CEO of the SANS Institute. What can you say about a former Navy search and rescue crewman, white water raft guide and martial arts expert who's also one of the leading intellectual lights in the field of computer security? Sign him up, we say -- Northcutt is the kind of geek who'll reach through the Internet and slap a cybercriminal silly. His books are must-reads in the IT security world and his creds, including his very scary-sounding job as Chief for Information Warfare at the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization, are impeccable.
THE BULLDOG
Patrick Fitzgerald, U.S. attorney. Obama may have to sign Fitzgerald up as Cyber Czar just to keep the relentless Brooklyn-born prosecutor from locking up every high-ranking office holder in Illinois. In a way, it's a perfect fit -- security knows no political parties and Fitzgerald is as nonpartisan as they get, going after Republicans like Dick Cheney's aide Scooter Libby and Democrats like Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich with equal tenacity. He's no IT guru, but Fitzgerald could delegate the technical stuff and do what he does best, root out criminals and throw the book at them.
THE COLLABORATOR
Rod Beckstrom, head of the National Cyber Security Center. Short of tapping Linus Torvalds or Jimmy Wales, Obama couldn't steer the NOC in the direction of a Web 2.0 approach to security more than by naming Beckstrom to lead the new office. The co-author of "The Starfish and the Spider" and a pioneering derivatives trader, Beckstrom has brought his nonhierarchical, collaborative problem-solving methods to the IT war with terrorist groups like Al-Qaeda in his current role as head of the Department of Homeland Security's NCSC. Beckstrom's "new new" approach to national cybersecurity would likely tilt less towards locking down data than to opening up its stewardship to more bright minds in more places.
