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Microsoft to release November fixes

Horrocks   on 09 November 2008 - 16:57 · 4 comments & 2342 views

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Microsoft is preparing to release a pair of updates next Tuesday.

The company said in an advance notice that the November edition of the 'Patch Tuesday' release will include one fix labeled 'critical' and a second labeled 'important.'

The critical fix addresses a vulnerability in the Microsoft XML Core Services component in Windows 2000, XP, Server 2003, 2008 and Windows Vista. While Microsoft did not disclose the exact nature of the vulnerability, the company said that if exploited it could allow an attacker to remotely execute code on a targeted system.

While the second flaw could also allow an attacker to remotely execute code, Microsoft rated the issue as an 'important' risk. The vulnerability lies within a component in Windows 2000, XP, Server 2003, Server 2008 and Windows Vista.

Microsoft offered little more on the nature of the vulnerability. The company typically refrains from disclosing specific details on a flaw until a fix can be released.

The November update comes just two weeks after the disclosure and patching of another critical vulnerability in a Windows component. Shortly after the company posted the fix, an attack for the flaw was reported.

Microsoft is planning to release the update next Tuesday. The update is typically released by early afternoon US Pacific time.

View: TechRadar

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 4 additional comments
(2 replies) #1 Mr. Dee on 09 Nov 2008 - 18:50
You gotta give Microsoft credit, supporting a 9 year old OS such as Windows 2000 will should put both consumers and businesses trust when it comes to Windows at ease.
#1.1 thealexweb on 09 Nov 2008 - 19:04
Extended support for Windows 200 doesn't run out till 2010, they'll be helping 2000 users for some time yet.
#1.2 GP007 on 10 Nov 2008 - 00:26
Well, by then I'd hope business has upgraded from win2k. It was a good OS for it's time, but it's not cheap to support old products like that. And then people wonder why they charge so much?
#2 +Chrono951 on 10 Nov 2008 - 21:03
Shouldn't it be "this coming Tuesday" instead of "next Tuesday" as Patch Tuesday usually falls on the second Tuesday of the month?

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