On Tue, Apr 27, 2004 at 12:52:26PM -0500, Duquette, John wrote: > That is a terrible policy to follow. If the vulnerability is real enough > for the vendor to publish a patch, then sysadmins should patch their > systems. Haven't all the recent worms taught people anything?
The problem is that many vendors don't publish pure security patches, instead bundling new features with the security fix. This places sysadmins in the position of having to evaluate the existing vulnerability against the chance of new holes and/or broken features in the patch. If you're dealing with a vendor who does pure security patches, then I agree with you. (That's why I run Debian stable - they backport all security patches, so you know that your security upgrade is _just_ a security upgrade.) If you're dealing with '90s-era Microsoft, where the only security patches are bundled with dozens of other changes and "enhancements" in a Service Pack that's liable to break more things than it fixes, then the situation isn't so clear- cut. -- The freedoms that we enjoy presently are the most important victories of the White Hats over the past several millennia, and it is vitally important that we don't give them up now, only because we are frightened. - Eolake Stobblehouse (http://stobblehouse.com/text/battle.html) _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html
