Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 10th Oct 2007 22:45 UTC
Windows "The principal reason given for the tremendous under-the-hood changes to Windows unveiled early this year in Vista was the need to overhaul the security model. Indeed, Vista has proven to be a generally more secure operating system, though some vulnerabilities that apply to ordinary software impact Vista users just as much as any other. But now, software analysts testing the latest build 3205 of the beta for Windows XP Service Pack 3 are discovering a wealth of genuinely new features - not just patches and security updates (although there are literally over a thousand of those), but services that could substantially improve system security without overhauling the kernel like in Vista."
Permalink for comment 277561
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
don't understand
by evert on Wed 10th Oct 2007 23:28 UTC
evert
Member since:
2005-07-06

I totally do not understand this kind of security. Basically, if some client says it can be trusted, the server just trusts the client?

Yes, it promotes clients to update their machines, but it is not secure. A clients can say that it is secure, but that does not make it secure.