Cybercrime Rises and Vista 7 is Already Open to Hijackers
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2009-01-01 20:10:22 UTC
- Modified: 2009-01-01 20:10:22 UTC
No fixes available
AN INTERESTING YEAR -- not in the good sense by any means -- lies ahead of many. As more people are under financial pressure, crime is likely to soar and it already does, according to news reports. The BBC warns about the effects of the recession/depression on cybercrime.
With the economic downturn affecting every corner of the globe, it is perhaps no surprise that it is likely to affect hi-tech criminals over the next 12 months.
Now more than ever it is crucial to ensure that systems are highly secure. Break-in attempts will most likely rise, so defenses must too (
or else).
As we mentioned back
in October, Vista 7 [sic] was given to
particular people with critical flaws in it. It was inherently hijack-capable (or hijack-ready) and there were no patches available to fix this. Here is a
new short report about the very same problem, which relates to the latest build.
Leaked Windows 7 Beta Includes Free Security Holes
[...]
Turns out that it’s impossible to apply security updates to the bootleg version, including the recent “out of band” update for a seriously critical vulnerability in Internet Explorer.
It's worth emphasising that Microsoft has said absolutely nothing about security improvements in Vista 7, despite the fact that
Windows Vista is a security failure and all Microsoft can do is
bother journalists over their exposure of this problem. Since Vista 7 is just Vista with a mild facelift, it will be as insecure as Vista.
⬆
"Our products just aren't engineered for security."
--Brian Valentine, Microsoft executive
Comments
Diamond Wakizashi
2009-01-02 00:27:27
David Gerard
2009-01-02 15:47:11
Roy Schestowitz
2009-01-02 15:48:20
Roy Bixler
2009-01-02 16:02:10
David Gerard
2009-01-03 20:39:25
I have nothing against using lots of memory and CPU to give people a good user experience - KDE4 is fat, Mac OS X is fat, GNOME is fat, for this reason. I do have something against using lots of memory and CPU to fail to inflict DRM on everyone ...
Roy Schestowitz
2009-01-03 20:42:20
David Gerard
2009-01-03 20:49:57
Here's to software freedom!
Roy Schestowitz
2009-01-03 20:59:14