Thanks Digi who found this in the official forum
Mark Rein posted the following:
Folks,
Daniel Vogel informed me that he unknowingly accidentally broke Voodoo3/5 compatibility in the demo. We're fixing it and there will be a patch that addresses that plus a few other major bugs we discovered. Keep watching the Official Unreal Tournament 2003 Site for news of its release.
We are sincerely sorry for this. Daniel claims it was just one, itty-bitty, single little line of code that caused it to break. I'll make sure that I personally play the gold master for the full game (when it's done) on Voodoo3 and Voodoo5 to make sure it doesn't happen for the retail version.
Thanks for your patience and again, our apologies.
News source: TDR.com
View: Official UT 2003 Forum
Mark Rein posted the following:
Folks,
Daniel Vogel informed me that he unknowingly accidentally broke Voodoo3/5 compatibility in the demo. We're fixing it and there will be a patch that addresses that plus a few other major bugs we discovered. Keep watching the Official Unreal Tournament 2003 Site for news of its release.
We are sincerely sorry for this. Daniel claims it was just one, itty-bitty, single little line of code that caused it to break. I'll make sure that I personally play the gold master for the full game (when it's done) on Voodoo3 and Voodoo5 to make sure it doesn't happen for the retail version.
Thanks for your patience and again, our apologies.
MS02-044 (Q328130): Unsafe Functions in Office Web Components
The Office Web Components (OWC) contain several ActiveX controls that give users limited functionality of Microsoft Office in a web browser without requiring that the user install the full Microsoft Office application. This allows users to utilize Microsoft Office applications in situations where installation of the full application is infeasible or undesirable.
The control contains three security vulnerabilities, each of which could be exploited either via a web site or an HTML mail.
MS02-045 (Q326830): Unchecked Buffer in Network Share Provider Can Lead to Denial of Service
SMB (Server Message Block) is the protocol Microsoft uses to share files, printers, serial ports, and also to communicate between computers using named pipes and mail slots. In a networked environment, servers make file systems and resources available to clients. Clients make SMB requests for resources and servers make SMB responses in what described as a client server, request-response protocol.
By sending a specially crafted packet request, an attacker can mount a denial of service attack on the target server machine and crash the system. The attacker could use both a user account and anonymous access to accomplish this. Though not confirmed, it may be possible to execute arbitrary code.
MS02-046 (Q327521): Buffer Overrun in TSAC ActiveX Control Could Allow Code Execution
A security vulnerability results because the control contains an unchecked buffer in the code that processes one of the input parameters. By calling the control on a client system and overrunning the buffer, an attacker could gain the ability to run code in the security context of the currently logged on user. This would enable the attacker to take any desired action on the user's system. The attacker could mount an attack by either hosting a web page that exploits the vulnerability against any user who visits it, or by sending an HTML mail to another user.

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