Vista has not yet made a hole
Microsoft has just officially provided the first security update for the next version of Windows Vista operating system. This can be considered a strong blow to the commitment to improve the security of this version of Microsoft operating system.
Over the weekend, Microsoft released patches for those who were chosen to test this new operating system version - Windows Vista December CTP - and Windows Vista Beta 1.
Accordingly, Microsoft warns that Windows Vista also has security flaws in the Graphics Rendering Engine and can be exploited remotely by executing malicious code.
According to a Microsoft spokesperson, the latest patches for Vista are also intended to fix WMG security (Windows Metafile) similar to other Windows versions.
But when Microsoft released WMF patches for other operating system versions, it did not warn that Windows Vista also suffers from this security error. But with the release of this first Vista patch, it proved that Microsoft was still quite careless in designing the 'SetAbortProc' function - a function used to cancel print jobs.
Along with that, Microsoft must also do its best to refute the information that the WMF error is actually a 'back door' placed in conscious Windows versions.
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