Security news September 14, 2006

Microsoft Corp. (MSFT.O: Quote, Profile, Research) on Tuesday released three security patches to fix holes in its Windows and Office software and warned one of the vulnerabilities was “critical” because it could allow an attacker to take over a user’s computer.

The world’s biggest software maker said the single flaw rated at critical — the highest level — related to Microsoft Publisher, which is included with some editions of Office. The other vulnerabilities were ranked at the next highest levels of “important” and “moderate” and affected its Windows software.

“Attackers see home users as the weakest link in the security chain and are increasingly targeting this group in an effort to profit,” Oliver Friedrichs, an expert at security software maker Symantec Corp. (SYMC.O: Quote, Profile, Research).

Microsoft, whose Windows operating system runs on 90 percent of the world’s computers, issued the patches as part of its monthly security bulletin.

The company defines a flaw as “critical” when the vulnerability could allow a damaging Internet worm to replicate without the user doing anything to the machine.

The company has been working for more than three years to improve the security and reliability of its software as more and more malicious software target weaknesses in Windows and other Microsoft software.

Related Articles:
  • Attack code out for critical Windows flaw: Computer code posted over the weekend can crash vulnerable computers
  • Security flaw touches Windows Media Player, IE: A "critical" flaw that affects both Microsoft's Windows Media Player
  • Apple iTunes security flaw discovered: A critical vulnerability has been found in some versions of
  • Critical Windows patch may wreak PC havoc: A Microsoft patch meant to fix critical security flaws in
  • Trojan rides in on unpatched Office flaw: A new Trojan horse exploits an unpatched flaw in Microsoft
  • Articles:

    Leave a Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.