June Patch Tuesday Addresses Bluetooth, Kill Bit
Microsoft plans to issue seven sets of safety measure patches on June 10 in a Patch Tuesday that will include critical fixes for Web Explorer, DirectX and Bluetooth wireless software for Windows.
Beyond the critical fixes, Microsoft plans to release patches rated urgent. fundamental fixes are due for Active Directory, the Windows Net Name Service (WINS), and the Pragmatic General Multicast (PGM) protocol, which Windows uses to stream media to multiple recipients.
The seventh update is rated moderate. that safety measure update addresses “kill bit” for Windows. The patch disables cipher that has a known shield bug.
The Bluetooth Bug
The Bluetooth critical update affects the latest versions of Windows, including Windows XP SP2 and SP3 and Windows Vista SP1. The vulnerability could allow attackers to take control of a computer from a remote location.
Microsoft Baseline defense Analyzer can detect whether your computer system requires that update. The update may require a restart.
Tyler Regulay, a
Yet Another Kill Bit
The kill bit is a feature Microsoft invented to solve the problem of unexpected ActiveX execution in Web Explorer. that is a flag that allows a user to prevent execution of some ActiveX items while running Web Explorer.
“Microsoft is setting another kill bit,” Regulay said. “I’ll be interested to see what product it is that day. It was First4Internet XCP (Sony Rootkit incident) in 2005, and Yahoo Jukebox a few months ago.”
that month Microsoft is acknowledging two denial-of-service vulnerabilities. Regulay said it’s interesting that Microsoft is once again wavering on its DoS stance. Microsoft can’t seem to form up its…
Orginal post by Mike
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