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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper why software developers release security patches and reports a few of the security patches released by Microsoft over the last few years and the vulnerabilities they protected the user from. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGmsscpt.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
(Microsoft, 2005). When customers receive a bulletin, they connect with the Microsoft Web site for information on the issue and to download the patch. Microsoft has an automated security patch
update service (SUS), which "provides ides an automated means to distribute and install critical operating system (OS) fixes and security rollups on Windows 2000 and later workstations and servers" (Pawlak,
2002). Pawlak (2002) explains this allows information technology departments to protect their data before hackers can exploit newly discovered vulnerability points in the software application. The Code Red Virus is
a good example because it was discovered that even "combinations of firewalls and virus-scanning software" (Pawlak, 2002) were not capable of protecting an organization against specific types of attacks (Pawlak,
2002). Patches often correct flawed codes (Pawlak, 2002). This was the case with the Code Red virus patch which protected against buffer-overflow vulnerabilities (Pawlak, 2002). The patches released
by Microsoft corrected the code (Pawlak, 2002). Over the last few years, Microsoft has released numerous security patches for different software applications. Pawlak (2002) reported that Microsoft issued 15 security
patches between January and March 2002. Some of the many other security patches released by Microsoft over the last few years include the Microsoft Word 2000 RTF Macro Vulnerability Patch
released in 2001 to correct the programs "vulnerability that could allow malicious code to run in a Rich Text Format (RTF) document without warning" (Download.com, 2001). In 2002, one of
the patches released "the Microsoft IIS Cumulative Patch" (Server Watch, 2002). This was specifically for Microsofts Information Services Web server (Server Watch, 2002). Microsoft rated this vulnerability severe and strongly
recommended all users to install the patch (Server Watch, 2002). That patch covered more than 10 vulnerabilities that had been discovered, the "most serious of which could enable code of
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