Microsoft last week patched nine vulnerabilities, five marked "critical," in Windows 7, a move that will require users upgrading
to the new operating system starting Thursday to download a security update to keep their PCs secure.
The patches were the first for Windows 7's final build, dubbed RTM for "release to manufacturing," that has been in some customers'
hands, primarily enterprises with volume licensing agreements, since August.
Windows 7's patch count, however, was significantly less than either Windows Vista's, its immediate predecessor, or that of
Windows XP, the eight-year-old operating system installed on the majority of systems worldwide.
An analysis by Computerworld of the massive Oct. 13 security update -- the largest by Microsoft since it started patching on a regular monthly schedule six year ago -- showed that Windows 7
was affected by nine of the 34 vulnerabilities, or 26% of the total. Its count of critical bugs -- the most serious as marked
by Microsoft -- was five out of a possible 21, or 24%.
Windows Vista, meanwhile, was impacted by 19 of the 34 vulnerabilities, or 56% of the total, with 11 pegged critical, or 52%
of the possible.
Windows XP was affected by the most vulnerabilities of all: 24 out of 34, or 71% of the total. Of the two-dozen bugs that
needed patching in Windows XP, 18 were tagged as critical, or 86% of the total critical count.
The tallies indicated that, at least this month, Windows 7 was afflicted with about half as many vulnerabilities as was Vista,
and about a third as many as was Windows XP. Its critical bug count followed the same pattern.
Those flaws that did affect Windows 7 were probably due to recycled code, said security experts. "The Windows 7 vulnerabilities
are coming from its legacy code base," said Jason Miller, the security and data team manager for patch management vendor Shavlik
Technologies.
In fact, none of the vulnerabilities patched last week were Windows 7-only flaws. Of the five security bulletins that affected
the new OS, all five also impacted Vista and XP, and all but one had to be patched in the even-older Windows 2000.
The phenomenon of vulnerabilities in old code isn't new. Just months after Vista's launch, security researchers took Microsoft to task for overlooking a vulnerability in Windows' animated cursor in the brand-new operating system, even though was closely linked
to a bug Microsoft had patched more than two years before.
Microsoft has promoted Windows 7 as safer and more secure than its predecessor, something it did two three years ago when
it touted Vista as better than XP. But everything is relative.
Even Microsoft's top expert on designing software with security in mind -- a process Microsoft calls Security Development
Lifecycle, or SDL -- has admitted that it is virtually impossible to catch some kinds of bugs without tedious line-by-line review of the code, something even Microsoft is hard-pressed to
do.
On the bright side for Microsoft, three of the five critical vulnerabilities assigned to Windows 7 are in Internet Explorer
8 (IE8), the browser that ships with the new OS. The remaining two are in older editions of the .NET Framework and Silverlight,
the .NET-based cross-browser, cross-platform media standard Microsoft's pushing.
For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright Computerworld, Inc.