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Eight worst Windows flaws of the decade

Eight worst Windows flaws of the decade

By:  Andrew Brandt  On: 06 Oct 2008 For: InfoWorld (U.S.) 

Errors buried in millions of code have steered great corporations and turned the tide of fortunes. It's high time these flaws get the credit they deserve...

What the worm did was probe vulnerable IIS servers, infect them, and create 100 threads of itself, which then spread to other computers. If the date was between the 20th of the month and the end of the month, it would attempt to spew data at www.whitehouse.gov. Permeh and Maiffret estimated that the worm could infect approximately 500,000 unique IP addresses per day.

Upshot: Code Red really drove home the importance of patching bugs soon after Microsoft released the patch, because the patches themselves give malware authors clues to exactly where they should look for new vulnerabilities.

Fastest infection. Ever

Bug identifier: MS02-039

Description: Buffer overruns in SQL Server 2000 Resolution Service could enable remote code execution

Alias: The SQL Slammer bug Date published: July 24, 2002

While technically not an OS bug, the SQL Slammer bug deserves honorary mention due to the sheer velocity with which vulnerable systems were infected. The bug targeted Microsoft's database server. Vulnerable computers were subject to buffer overflows that, if properly crafted, could place commands into memory to cause the targeted system to execute those commands with the permissions of the database service.

Patching was complicated by the fact that admins needed to run an earlier patch before they could run the MS02-039 fix. The bug affected primarily corporate server systems, but also affected home users who had MSDE (Microsoft SQL Server Desktop Engine) installed. That made a number of home users, some of whom didn't even know they had MSDE on their machines, unwitting participants in the carnage to come.

Because the Sl








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Andrew Brandt Andrew Brandt is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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