Good News - May 13th Updates for Windows XP

M

Mr. Man-wai Chang

This might not be ready for prime time - yet.
I told you that there would be a way for these XP updates to be modded
and leaked to the web. Every PatchTuesday this is going to happen.

Good job in my opinion...

--
@~@ Remain silent. Nothing from soldiers and magicians is real!
/ v \ Simplicity is Beauty! May the Force and farces be with you!
/( _ )\ (Fedora 19 i686) Linux 3.14.4-100.fc19.i686
^ ^ 19:24:03 up 1 day 4:22 0 users load average: 0.00 0.01 0.05
ä¸å€Ÿè²¸! ä¸è©é¨™! ä¸æ´äº¤! ä¸æ‰“交! ä¸æ‰“劫! ä¸è‡ªæ®º! è«‹è€ƒæ…®ç¶œæ´ (CSSA):
http://www.swd.gov.hk/tc/index/site_pubsvc/page_socsecu/sub_addressesa
 
X

XP Guy

Todd said:
So M$ actually has the updates, but is withholding
them from the general public.

In the psychopathic mind of Macro$haft, Windows XP-SP3 and POSReady 2009
are two completely different products, and hence they are not
withholding anything from XP-SP3.

In the rational and practical mind of the rest of us, POSReady 2009 and
XP-SP3 are the same operating system - but with different license
agreements (which naturally is of no consequence or concern to us).

By the way, if you had done it today (and selected "Custom" instead of
"Express" installation), this is what you'd see:

3 Critical updates:

================

Security Update for Microsoft .NET Framework 2.0 SP2 on Windows Server
2003
KB2932079 - MS14-026
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2932079
Download size: 1.1 MB , less than 1 minute

A security issue has been identified in a Microsoft software product
that could affect your system. You can help protect your system by
installing this update from Microsoft. For a complete listing of the
issues that are included in this update, see the associated Microsoft
Knowledge Base article. After you install this update, you may have to
restart your system. Details...

==============

Security Update for WEPOS and POSReady 2009
KB2926765 - MS14-027
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2926765
Typical download size: 275 KB , less than 1 minute

A security issue has been identified in a Microsoft software product
that could affect your system. You can help protect your system by
installing this update from Microsoft. For a complete listing of the
issues that are included in this update, see the associated Microsoft
Knowledge Base article. After you install this update, you may have to
restart your system. Details...

==================

Security Update for Internet Explorer 8 for WEPOS and POSReady 2009
KB2953522 - MS14-029
AKA Security update for Internet Explorer versions 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and
11: May 13, 2014
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2953522
Download size: 3.2 MB , less than 1 minute

A security issue has been identified in a Microsoft software product
that could affect your system. You can help protect your system by
installing this update from Microsoft. For a complete listing of the
issues that are included in this update, see the associated Microsoft
Knowledge Base article. After you install this update, you may have to
restart your system. Details...

===================

Now you go ahead and read those microsoft links. And if you really want
to be so frighted about the state of your XP system less than a month
after "official" end-of-support, you'll read these:

http://www.pcworld.com/article/2154...ttackers-a-roadmap-to-xp-vulnerabilities.html

http://www.zdnet.com/microsoft-patches-office-sharepoint-and-windows-leaves-xp-behind-7000029405/

As you read them and notice the MS14-what-ever numbers they mention, go
and glance at what updates you could be installing right now if you
follow my instructions. Those are the same updates being offered to
Win-7 and various other platforms - but not for XP.

Yes, I updated an XP-SP3 system with those 3 critical updates.

And then I selected a bunch of suggested updates (there were about a
dozen of them). One of those was a root certificate update (dated Nov
2013) that for some reason Micro$haft wasn't offering to me before.

One day, maybe soon, you'll realize that yes, POSReady 2009 is XP-SP3
with a different license agreement, and you'll be dying to get those
updates on your systems. So you can thank me now, or thank me later.

And no, Micro$haft will do nothing to prohibit this in the future. The
millions of various POS systems around the world are too important to
**** with by trying to make some change that will prevent this hack from
working on "real" XP systems.

Mark my words. Hear me now and believe me later.

In the mean time you can all shout "We're not worthy!".
 
J

Jon Danniken

You can not run as an administrator and a user at the
same time. M$ makes it too easy.

Sure you can, just give your user administrative rights, or just log in
as root; it's not the best idea, but you can do it.

Jon
 
T

Todd

Sure you can, just give your user administrative rights, or just log in
as root; it's not the best idea, but you can do it.

Jon

Hi Jon,

You actually have to know how to do that. Out of the
box, you don't get those rights. You have to work at
it. And "why". Everyone just leaves it at the default.
And the installer harasses you for proper passwords.

Not with Windows. You get those rights right out
of the box. You can even have blank passwords without
being harassed. M$ makes it too easy.

With Linux, you have to work at it. With Windows,
all you have to do in work on it.

There is no excuse for how sloppy M$ is with security.

-T
 
C

casey.o

This trick works because for the purposes of WindowsUpdate, it makes WU
think you're running POS2009 (Point Of Service 2009) which is basically

And I always thought POS meant "Piece of Shit" :)
 

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