anuseems Posted May 14, 2014 Share Posted May 14, 2014 (edited) For the latest round of Microsoft's monthly collection of software patches, the company has fixed critical issues in Internet Explorer (IE) and Windows that have already been used by malicious attackers to compromised systems.From Computerworld:None of these fixes are for Windows XP or Office 2003, both of which Microsoft stopped supporting in April (except for those customers with extended support contracts). Many of the patches in this month's collection do fix code vulnerabilities that probably originated in Windows XP or Office 2003, if not in earlier versions.Studying what is being fixed with each month's round of patches could give attackers an easy entry point into these older, now unsupported, systems, because these older systems probably have the same vulnerabilities, said Wolfgang Kandek, chief technology officer for IT security firm Qualys. Qualys estimated that eight of the 10 patches this month could apply to XP or Office 2003.http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9248321/Microsoft_s_Patch_Tuesday_gives_XP_attackers_a_roadmap Edited May 14, 2014 by anuseems Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
banned Posted May 14, 2014 Share Posted May 14, 2014 Many of the patches in this month's collection do fix code vulnerabilities that probably originated in Windows XP or Office 2003, if not in earlier versions.The fact that the same vulnerabilities usually exist in Windows 7/8 and XP proves our point about Windows upgrades. They're nonsense, and only the gullible buy it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dcs18 Posted May 15, 2014 Share Posted May 15, 2014 The big gaping difference is that Microsoft is contracted to deploy security updates and bug-fixes to modern OS like the 8.1 and 7, through Windows Update - now, what were the gullible, naive and blonde Users of XP boasting about. :coolwink: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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