Original URL: 
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/09/12/ms_pulls_security_patch/
MS pulls upcoming Windows security patch
By John Leyden (john.leyden at theregister.co.uk)
Published Monday 12th September 2005 11:44 GMT

Microsoft has pulled plans to release a critical Windows security patch on
Tuesday citing quality concerns as the reason behind the late withdrawal.
Last Thursday Microsoft announced its intent to release a solitary patch in
September as part of its monthly patch cycle but by Friday afternoon the
software giant had second thoughts prompting it to pull
(http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/advance.mspx) the
planned release.

"Late in the testing process, Microsoft encountered a quality issue that
necessitated the update to go through additional testing and development
before it is released. Microsoft is committed to only releasing high quality
updates that fix the issues in question, and therefore we feel it is in the
best interest of our customers to not release this update until it undergoes
further testing," a Microsoft spokesman explained.

Other than saying it planned to release a solitary fix in last week's
advanced bulletin, Microsoft is yet to disclose any details of the security
bug other than to describe it as "critical". Redmond defines critical
security vulns as those which might be exploited remotely and without any
interaction by end users. Last month, Microsoft issued six security patches.
Among the three critical patches was one to defend against a Plug and Play
vulnerability which was rapidly seized upon by virus writers to create
prolific Zotob and other worms, which caused pandemonium in unpatched
Windows 2000 shops last month.

Microsoft said that although it won't be issuing any new security patches on
Tuesday it will still issue updates to its malicious software removal tool
and a number of software updates to software tools unrelated to security
issues. Critics of Microsoft will doubtless use the incident to make
unfavourable comparisons between the relative reliability of software fixes
from Redmond and open source developers. The release of a broken fix would
have drawn even sharper criticism, of course. Whatever Microsoft did it
would have got some stick but it can take comfort from support from segments
of the security community.

"This is a wise decision by Microsoft. If there is any indication in the
testing process that the patch is broken, it is in the best interest of
businesses to pull the patch. Microsoft has to run a strict testing process
for all its patches to ensure that its patches do not adversely affect
systems," said Alan Bentley, UK managing director of patch management firm
PatchLink. ®



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