Thread: Breaking News
View Single Post
Old 16-10-05, 05:12 PM   #1
VWguy
Japanamation junkie
 
VWguy's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: U.S.A.
Posts: 2,075
Default Breaking News

Critical Windows patch may wreak PC havoc

A Microsoft patch meant to fix critical security flaws in Windows 2000, Windows XP and Windows Server 2003 is causing trouble for some users, the company said Friday.

The patch was released Tuesday to fix four Windows flaws, including one that experts predict will be exploited by a worm in the coming days. The flaw, tagged "critical" by Microsoft, lies in a Windows component for transaction processing called the Microsoft Distributed Transaction Coordinator, or MSDTC.

Installing the patch can cause serious problems, Microsoft said in an advisory posted to its Web site Friday. The patch could lock users out of their PC, prevent the Windows Firewall from starting, block certain applications from running or installing, and empty the network connections folder, among other things, the software maker said.

The trouble appears to occur only when default permission settings on a Windows directory have been changed, according to Microsoft. The software maker has received "limited reports" of problems from customers but is still investigating the issue, a representative said.

Even if users experience PC trouble after installing the patch, they will still be protected against any attack exploiting the Windows flaw, a Microsoft representative said. The patch was delivered with Microsoft security bulletin MS05-051.

To resolve any problems caused by the MS05-051 patch, users should restore the default permissions for the Windows folder and the COM+ catalog. A guide is available on the Microsoft Web site, and steps start with changing the permissions on the "registration" folder in the Windows directory.


http://news.com.com/Critical+Windows...l?tag=nefd.top

Samsung To Pay Fine In Antitrust Settlement

Samsung Electronics Co. has agreed to pay $300 million for its role in an international plot that artificially raised prices for a technology essential to computers and electronics devices, the Justice Department said yesterday.

The settlement is the second-largest criminal antitrust fine in history, the department said, and comes at the end of a three-year federal investigation of manufacturers who build "dynamic random access memory" chips, a market that was worth $7.7 billion in the United States last year. Samsung, based in Korea, is the world's largest maker of memory chips.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...101301971.html
__________________

You're only given a little spark of madness. You mustn't lose it. -Robin Williams

Your future in a nutshell.
VWguy is offline   Reply With Quote