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December 13th, 2007

Fewer patches != safer OS

Posted by Adrian Kingsley-Hughes @ 6:20 am

Categories: Industry, Security, Software, Thoughts

Tags: Security, Operating System, Vulnerability, Patch Management, Microsoft Windows Vista, Patches, Microsoft Windows Vista (Longhorn), Operating Systems, Microsoft Windows, Software

Does one OS having fewer security patches than another operating system mean that the OS with the fewer patches is the safest OS?  You know, I’m not sold of that concept.

Sure, patch numbers make good talking points, but any conclusions drawn from them are shaky at bestAs we near the first anniversary of the consumer launch of Windows Vista we’ll be seeing pundits all over the media taking a look back at the Vista’s first year.  One aspect of Vista that some will undoubtedly be looking at is patches and how many have been issued for Vista (in fact, my blogging colleague Ed Bott’s already done this).  Many will interpret the fact that XP has had more patches rated critical and important than Vista as an indication that Vista is safer than XP (in fact, this is the conclusion that Ed himself came to). 

In the same way that I don’t automatically believe that more patches means an insecure OS, I’m equally not convinced that fewer patches are an indication of a secure OS.  That’s far too simplistic because each patched vulnerability ends up only being a problem for those who’ve not applied the appropriate patches.  Like road side punctures, how many you’ve had in the last few months says little about your chances of getting the next puncture (unless you spend all your time driving over stingers).  The number of patched vulnerabilities says nothing about how many are left.  Because it’s difficult (if not close to impossible) to come up with a sensible metric for security, this void is filled with meaningless metrics.  Sure, patch numbers make good talking points, but any conclusions drawn from them are shaky at best.

What, if anything, the past year has shown us is that yes, just like XP before it, Vista also contains critical bugs (swap Tiger and Leopard for XP and Vista in that previous sentence if that makes you feel better).  If we’d had a situation where a year on there’s been no critical/important bugs discovered, that might have made me sit up and pay attention, but even that wouldn’t make me drop my guard.

Another thing about vulnerabilities is that they either affect you or they don’t.  As a rule, most pass you by unnoticed.  You apply the patch and get on with life.  If you’re hit by a vulnerability then it’s time to stop relying solely on vendor patches, take some proactive steps and install third-party protection (love them or hate them, security firms plug security holes pretty quickly these days). 

Any time you see someone going to the bother of counting patches take time to remind yourself of that old adage popularized by Mark Twain - lies, damned lies, and statistic.

Thoughts?

Adrian Kingsley-HughesAdrian is a technology journalist and author who has devoted over a decade to helping users get the most from technology. He also runs a popular blog called The PC Doctor. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations

Want to get in touch? Got a tip? Feel free to drop me a note! I ALWAYS respect anonymity. I'm also on Twitter (@the_pc_doc)

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Related Discussions on TechRepublic

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 39 Talkback(s)
Quote
Actually, it was Disraeli that said it. (Read the rest)
Posted by: 3dguru Posted on: 12/16/07 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Mathematics  Yagotta B. Kidding | 12/13/07
That was elegant  nova81426 | 12/13/07
Partially true  Yagotta B. Kidding | 12/13/07
Here is another angle to that  goxk@... | 12/13/07
Missed a variable?  DigitalFrog | 12/14/07
RE: Fewer patches != safer OS  ju1ce | 12/13/07
Numb and number  pablo Dante | 12/13/07
Metaphysics  Yagotta B. Kidding | 12/13/07
Under Microsoft's metaphysics  pablo Dante | 12/13/07
Haha, good one!!  NonZealot | 12/13/07
How , then, to compare the security?  nilotpal_c | 12/13/07
You have raised some nice questions  goxk@... | 12/13/07
Inherently insecure environment  johnfenjackson@... | 12/13/07
Antidote  johnfenjackson@... | 12/13/07
OS X though is inherently secure  NonZealot | 12/13/07
oh for crying out loud.  lostarchitect | 12/13/07
Is there something you disagreed with in my post?  NonZealot | 12/13/07
Look  mtgarden | 12/13/07
Where did I say OS X was perfect?  NonZealot | 12/13/07
Super Secure? Yeah right. look at all the exploits  g2g591 | 12/14/07
You missed my point, Adrian  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 12/13/07
Actually Ed, your point is quite valid anyway  nilotpal_c | 12/13/07
Well put  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 12/13/07
how about  deaf_e_kate | 12/13/07
The difficulty being that  nilotpal_c | 12/13/07
Just to respond to one observation that  goxk@... | 12/13/07
yes.. but  deaf_e_kate | 12/14/07
This was the golden rule when OS X had less patches than Windows.  ye | 12/13/07
That's not fair  NonZealot | 12/13/07
Fewer exploits != safer OS either  ye | 12/13/07
I think for once I agree with you nt  goxk@... | 12/13/07
Not really..  ju1ce | 12/14/07
Actually it was my belief...  ju1ce | 12/14/07
This flies in the face of common sense  georgeou | 12/13/07
Formatting got screwed up, fixed version here  georgeou | 12/13/07
I think George what he is implying  goxk@... | 12/14/07
RE: Fewer patches != safer OS  pablo Dante | 12/15/07
I think time is very important.  hkommedal | 12/15/07
Quote  3dguru | 12/16/07

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