Microsoft to miss 'Patch Tuesday' again

Microsoft will not be issuing any security fixes next week, breaking its patch cycle for the second time this year.

In October 2003, Microsoft decided to release software fixes and updates on the second Tuesday of each month to make updating and resetting machines easier for administrators. Since then, it has only broken from its schedule on a handful of occasions to plug critical vulnerabilities.

A Microsoft spokesperson told ZDNet Australia  there will be "a couple of updates next week but none are security related. None are rated higher than 'important' and nothing will require a reboot".

In March, Microsoft also took a monthly patch hiatus, which is a sign that the company's Trustworthy Computing Initiative is working, the spokesperson said.

Late last year, director of Microsoft product security George Stathakopoulos said the company would like to eventually extend its patching cycle from once a month to once every six month - once it was confident that its customers would remain safe between updates.

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Talkback 3 comments

    Sounds like the trustworthy co ...Anonymous -- 07/05/05

    Sounds like the trustworthy computing thing is starting to really get some traction and real deliverables...not counting the chickens just yet though

    Microsoft missing a schedule h ...Anonymous -- 08/05/05

    Microsoft missing a schedule has become more than par for the course. This is what the top dog in the software world continuously does to it's customers. Glad they don't sell cars.

    Stephen, it wasn't that they m ...Anonymous -- 08/05/05

    Stephen, it wasn't that they missed the deadline, it was no critical or important patches are to be released this month. There are minor ones, but it is a good thing that no significant patches are released not a bad thing.

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