Microsoft: We patch faster than Apple, Novell, Red Hat
By Gregg Keizer, Computerworld
June 21, 2007 09:01 AM ET
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Windows users were at risk for in-the-wild vulnerabilities fewer days on average last year than users of rival operating systems
from Apple, Novell, Red Hat and Sun, a Microsoft executive claimed.
Jeff Jones, strategy director in Microsoft's security technology unit, has posted findings that show Microsoft released patches
for vulnerabilities in Windows overall -- and Windows XP in particular -- faster than its four competitors did for flaws in
their software. A Symantec executive acknowledged that Jones' data "reads accurate."
In two entries on his CSO blog, Jones laid out his analysis of "days-of-risk," a term that describes the time from when a vulnerability is announced or
goes public, to when the vendor releases a fix. By Jones' calculations, Windows -- including 2000, XP and Server 2003 -- boasted
an average days-of-risk (or DoR) last year of just under 29 days, compared to Mac OS X's 46 days, SuSE Linux Enterprise's
74, Red Hat Enterprise Linux's 107, and Sun Solaris' whopping 168.
That puts Microsoft 159% faster than Apple in preparing and distributing patches, 255% faster than Novell, and 579% faster
than Sun.
When Jones focused on specific operating system clients -- Windows XP SP2, Mac OS X 10.4, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 Workstation,
and SuSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 9 -- Microsoft still took first place, although the race was tighter. Windows XP was patched
after an average of 53.3 DoR, just 1.6% faster than Apple's Tiger at 54.2 DoR. SuSE and Red Hat came in third and fourth,
with 56.2 and 70.5 DoR respectively.
Alfred Huger, vice president of engineering with Symantec's security response group, said that Jones' numbers look reasonable.
"Our latest ISTRs (Internet Security Threat Reports) had more or less the same." In its most recent report, Symantec's reckoning
pegged Windows' average DoR for the last six months of 2006 at 21 days, Red Hat's at 58, Mac OS X's at 66, and Sun's at 122.
"We don't disagree, certainly [on the numbers]" said Huger. "[Jones'] reads accurate."
Some readers of Jones' CSO postings, however, had questions. "Where's your data?" asked someone identified as RJ Ryan. "It's
hard to take you seriously otherwise." Others commenting on Jones' first posting wanted to know how many vulnerabilities were
included in each count for a more detailed comparison. Jones responded to the latter by citing the number of vulnerabilities
included in each OS's DoR in Monday's blog. During 2006, Windows XP was patched for 90 bugs, Mac OS X for 129, SuSE for 232,
and Red Hat for 301.
But if history is any guide, it's unlikely everyone will take Jones at his word. In March, when Jones used other patch comparisons
to claim Windows Vista deserved an A+ security report card, some Computerworld readers scoffed. "Microsoft touts the larger (by orders of magnitude) number of bugs in various Linux
distros, but fails to mention that most (if not all) of those bugs were not in the core Linux OS, but in applications that
are shipped with the kernel," argued a reader tagged as "Filker0."
For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright Computerworld, Inc.
Comments (2)
Microsoft patches faster because its OSes get attacked fasterBy Anonymous on June 22, 2007, 4:50 pmPatch as fast as you like. The fact remains that Windows systems were and are successfully attacked more than any other platform by a wide margin, even if you look...
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Faster patching...By Eric on June 23, 2007, 12:57 pmWhat a joke, who cares if they have twice the in the wild exploits per year and at any given time there are a couple of ones out there for the current OS and WAY...
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