No Christmas patches from Microsoft
Company still working on vulnerabilities, says lack of patches is a holiday coincidence
December 10, 2003 12:00 PM ETComputerworld -
Microsoft Corp. has an early holiday gift for systems administrators: no monthly security patch release this month.
"It is a happy coincidence, but it is not related to Christmas," said Iain Mulholland, security program manager at Microsoft. "We have made a commitment to release [the monthly patch package] when we're ready, when we have quality patches. There is simply nothing that has passed the bar yet from a quality perspective for release in December."
In October, Microsoft moved to a monthly cycle for security patches, replacing a system of weekly updates that the company said had become too burdensome and complex for customers. The monthly updates also allow Microsoft to reduce the number of patches by folding multiple vulnerabilities affecting a single platform into one patch.
Systems administrators can expect a security update from Microsoft on Jan. 13, Mulholland said. However, that doesn't mean patch managers can sign off and hit the shopping mall or relax at home. If there's an immediate risk to customers, Microsoft will break its monthly cycle and issue an emergency patch.
Skipping a month doesn't mean all systems are secure. There are security vulnerabilities that Microsoft is working to patch, which means systems are at risk. For example, Microsoft is still investigating several flaws in Internet Explorer that were detailed last month by security company Secunia Ltd.
However, hackers don't seem to be exploiting any of those vulnerabilities right now, said Russ Cooper, surgeon general at TruSecure Corp. and moderator of the NTBugtraq security mailing list.
"Christmas or not, we all monitor constantly and keep our ears to the ground. Should we see some activity over the next few weeks targeting a specific vulnerability and that needs to shake Microsoft up a bit, I am sure they would be responsive," he said.
Jupiter Research senior analyst Joe Wilcox agreed that systems administrators need to remain on guard.
"For many security managers, no new patches to test and deploy will be like getting an early Christmas present. Ho, ho, ho, Santa's here," Wilcox said. "But that's no guarantee they won't later find coal in their stockings. Microsoft still has to get through December without some unexpected vulnerability necessitating an unscheduled patch."
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