Key Windows update ready to go
The long overdue security update for
Microsoft's XP operating system will soon be
available.
Microsoft has released the SP2 update
to PC manufacturers and it is expected to be widely available in late
August.
The update can be downloaded
from a Microsoft site, ordered from the company or found on CDs cover-mounted on
some consumer technology magazines.
The
security update is already available to companies who subscribe to Microsoft's
developer network.
Security
risk
Service Pack 2 has been created
to close many of the loopholes that many Windows viruses have exploited over the
last few years. Malicious hackers have used other loopholes in Windows XP to
take over and remotely control PCs.
The
SP2 software installs a security centre that lets people see and manage the
measures installed on their machine to block viruses and hack
attacks.
Changes:
Pop-up ads blocked
Revamped firewall on by
default
Outlook Express, Internet Explorer and
Windows Messenger warn about attachments
Origins of downloaded files logged
Web
graphics in e-mail no longer loaded by default
Some spyware blocked
Users regularly reminded
about Windows Updates
Security Center brings
together information about anti-virus, updates and
firewall
Protection against buffer
over-runs
Windows Messenger Service turned off
by default
The update also blocks pop-up ads
and lets users know when spyware is trying to install itself on their
machine.
The software also stops
graphics in e-mail messages loading automatically. This is because spammers use
these graphics as a way to log live e-mail
addresses.
The Service Pack 2 security
update was originally supposed to appear in 2003 but successive technical
hitches have delayed its arrival.
To
make sure the update is widely used, Microsoft said it has worked hard to ensure
that it conflicts with as few existing applications as
possible.
Microsoft hopes to have the
software installed on more than 100 million machines in the next two
months.
To reach this many machines it
is making the software very widely
available.
On its main site, Microsoft
is telling visitors to turn on Windows auto-update to prepare for the SP2
download. At 80MB in size, the software will take a while to
download.
Microsoft has made software
available that will let people download SP2 in bite-sized chunks that can be
re-assembled to be the full update.
Those on dial-up links will be able to order the CD from Microsoft or simply
install it from disks distributed with popular PC tech magazines from
newsstands.
The only people that will
not be able to get install the software will be people running the most pirated
versions of Windows XP.
Microsoft knows
the product ID numbers for the most-pirated versions of XP and has decided to
stop the software installing on machines using any of these copies of its
operating system.
Posted: Mon - August 9, 2004 at 05:38 PM