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Science/Tech
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Title: Microsoft throws lifeline to exposed Windows XP
Source: [None]
URL Source: [None]
Published: May 2, 2014
Author: staff
Post Date: 2014-05-02 20:04:46 by Tatarewicz
Keywords: None
Views: 136
Comments: 3

Presstv

Despite having officially withdrawn its support for the still-widely-popular Windows XP, Microsoft has offered up a fix for an Internet Explorer flaw, which also covers XP users.

The US technology giant stopped supporting XP on April 8. It offered the security patch on Thursday because the security flaw had come to light so close to the end of the support deadline. XP is estimated to be currently used by hundreds of millions of customers.

Microsoft learned about the serious security loophole on the browser over the weekend after learning that a sophisticated group of hackers had exploited the bug to launch attacks in a campaign dubbed "Operation Clandestine Fox.”

"The security of our products is something we take incredibly seriously, so the news coverage of the last few days about a vulnerability in Internet Explorer (IE) has been tough for our customers and for us," wrote Microsoft security executive Adrienne Hall on a Microsoft blog.

"This means that when we saw the first reports about this vulnerability we said fix it, fix it fast, and fix it for all our customers. So we did."

Users who have automatic updates turned on, which have the fix automatically downloaded to them. Others have to manually check for updates to install the new code.

HN/HN

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#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)

"The security of our products is something we take incredibly seriously..."

If that is the case then they are incredibly incompetent.

God is always good!

RickyJ  posted on  2014-05-02   21:04:33 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: RickyJ (#1)

Thank goodness for OS-X and Linux and Mozilla.

“The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable.” ~ H. L. Mencken

Lod  posted on  2014-05-02   22:15:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Lod, RickyJ (#2)

OS X is as easy to hack. But it still enjoys some protection from being less popular.

Microsoft, while not very creative, is not particularly incompetent.

Linux is not an instance of an operating system, but a class of operating systems.

The Silver Bullet

Not long ago, in an otherwise superb article [pdf] on the software reliability crisis published by MIT Technology Review, the author blamed the problem on everything from bad planning and business decisions to bad programmers. The proposed solution: bring in the lawyers. Not once did the article mention that the computer industry's fundamental approach to software construction might be flawed. The reason for this omission has to do in part with a highly influential paper that was published in 1987 by a now famous computer scientist named Frederick P. Brooks. In the paper, titled "No Silver Bullet--Essence and Accidents of Software Engineering", Dr. Brooks writes:

But, as we look to the horizon of a decade hence, we see no silver bullet. There is no single development, in either technology or in management technique, that by itself promises even one order-of-magnitude improvement in productivity, in reliability, in simplicity. ...

Not only are there no silver bullets now in view, the very nature of software makes it unlikely that there will be any--no inventions that will do for software productivity, reliability, and simplicity what electronics, transistors, and large-scale integration did for computer hardware.

No other paper in the annals of software engineering has had a more detrimental effect on humanity's efforts to find a solution to the software reliability crisis. Almost single-handedly, it succeeded in convincing the entire software development community that there is no hope in trying to find a solution. It is a rather unfortunate chapter in the history of programming. Untold billions of dollars and even human lives have been and will be wasted as a result.

...

Conclusion

Slaying the Werewolf

Unreliable software is the most urgent issue facing the computer industry. Reliable software is critical to the safety, security and prosperity of the modern computerized world. Software has become too much a part of our everyday lives to be entrusted to the vagaries of an archaic and hopelessly flawed paradigm. We need a new approach based on a rock-solid foundation, an approach worthy of the twenty-first century. And we need it desperately! We simply cannot afford to continue doing business as usual. Frederick Brooks is right about one thing: there is indeed no silver bullet that can solve the reliability problem of complex algorithmic systems. But what Brooks and others fail to consider is that his arguments apply only to the complexity of algorithmic software, not to that of behaving systems in general. In other words, the werewolf is not complexity per se but algorithmic software. The bullet should be used to slay the beast once and for all, not to alleviate the symptoms of its incurable illness.

Rotten at the Core

In conclusion, we can solve the software reliability and productivity crisis. To do so, we must acknowledge that there is something rotten at the core of software engineering. We must understand that using the algorithm as the basis of computer programming is the last of the stumbling blocks that are preventing us from achieving an effective and safe componentization of software comparable to what has been done in hardware. It is the reason that current quality control measures will always fail in the end. To solve the crisis, we must adopt a synchronous, signal-based software model. Only then will our software programs be guaranteed free of defects, irrespective of their complexity.

Republicans prefer white genocide to paying taxes or paying more for strawberries.
Democrats prefer white genocide to seeing anyone get ahead.
As the party of principle, Libertarians support white genocide because they oppose zoning.

Prefrontal Vortex  posted on  2014-05-03   5:27:00 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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