The company offers protection against a flaw that exposed most Windows XP users to exploits arriving in malicious files. Meanwhile, users wait for a URI fix from Microsoft
Microsoft Corp. on Tuesday offered patches for several serious Windows security holes and released a new tool that lets users remove malicious software from their PCs.
The flaws affect desktop as well as server installations of multiple Windows versions. However, none are rated "critical," Microsoft's highest severity rating.
Microsoft Corp. on Wednesday warned of several flaws in its ubiquitous Office products, the most serious of which could allow an attacker to take control of a user's computer.
Microsoft Corp. released a patch for a number of flaws in its Internet Explorer (IE) Web browser Wednesday, including two it rated critical for some versions of the browser, which could enable an attacker to take control of a user's computer.
Microsoft Corp. is revising a security patch for Windows XP systems with Service Pack 1 installed after customers complained that installing the patch slowed their systems down to a crawl.
After removing links to a security patch that caused the NT 4.0 operating system to fail, Microsoft Corp. on Friday posted an updated patch that fixes the NT 4.0 problem.
Microsoft Corp. issued two security advisories Wednesday, pointing to a "critical" flaw in its Internet Explorer browser and a second, less severe problem with its Windows XP operating system.