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Microsoft happy with progress in securing products
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The past two or three
weeks have been pretty bad ones for Microsoft but the operations manager
of the company's security response centre believes that it is following
the right road to making its products secure.
Iain Mulholland said security could not be ensured overnight and, as
proof of progress which the Trustworthy Computing Initiative, set in
place by the company's co-founder Bill Gates, had made, he pointed to
the fact that Windows Server 2003 has had less vulnerabilities than
Windows Server 2000 in a comparable period.
He defended the time which the company takes to release patches for
vulnerabilities - most recently, 200 days were taken to patch a
vulnerability in Abstract Syntax Notation One, a language which defines
the way data is sent across dissimilar communication systems - by saying
that the quality of the patch had to be ensured.
Any patch had to be tested against at least 1000 applications as there
were that many that were being run by various businesses on its
operating systems, Mulholland said.
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News source:
SMH.com.au |
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Intel Exec Sees 64-Bit Irrelevant for Home PCs Now
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SAN FRANCISCO
(Reuters) - A top Intel executive said 64-bit technology, which
gives computers greater memory capacity and more powerful data
crunching abilities, would not become relevant to home PC users
until sometime in 2006, later than anticipated by Intel's rival,
AMD.
William Siu, the general manager in charge of Intel's desktop
computer chips business, made the comments on Wednesday in an
interview with Reuters, a day after Intel reversed course and
endorsed 64-bit computing for its entire line of business computer
chips.
Siu, however, did not say that Intel would necessarily wait until
2006 to introduce the feature into its desktop computer chips. Intel
has held that it will offer the feature when it determines that an
"ecosystem" of operating systems and software to support the feature
has developed.
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News source:
Reuters |
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Linux Kernel Flaws Uncovered
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Security
researchers are warning of potentially serious vulnerabilities
in the Linux kernel that could allow malicious hackers to gain
full super-user privileges.
The vulnerability affects the 2.6.x branch prior to version
2.6.3 and the Linux kernel memory management code.
Experts note that the latest bug is unrelated to a previous
vulnerability in the same internal kernel function code.
Users are urged to update to version 2.6.3 at the
Linux Kernel Archives.
According to an advisory issued by Secunia, a boundary error in
the "ncp_lookup()" function causes the privilege escalation
flaw.
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News source:
InternetNews |
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