symantec.gifSymantec and Microsoft announced Tuesday at the RSA Conference Europe 2007 that they will join the Software Assurance Forum for Excellence in Code (SafeCode), a not-for-profit organization aimed at increasing trust around IT. Other members include EMC, SAP and Juniper Networks.

Commenting on questions about the recent argument between his company and Microsoft over Vista application programming interfaces (APIs), Ilias Chantzos, Symantec’s government relations manager for EMEA, said that the two organizations would cooperate in SafeCode to benefit customers.

“We have a multifaced relationship with Microsoft, and we are keen to work with them. That will ultimately benefit our customers. I see this relationship as complementary rather than competitive,” Chantzos said.

Last year, security companies, including Symantec and McAfee, complained that Microsoft had locked them out of the Windows kernel. The security companies claimed that a kernel shield developed by Microsoft, called “PatchGuard” and intended to stop hackers attacking 64-bit versions of Vista, blocked their security products too.

Microsoft eventually agreed to provide security companies with access to the 64-bit APIs but didn’t actually provide access until two months after it had officially relented.

Microsoft had long maintained that a complete lock on the kernel would provide the best operating system security and stability, but it made concessions in response to antitrust concerns raised by officials in Europe and Korea.

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