Skip to navigation
   
Davey Winder's Blog

Is Windows 7 a security timebomb?

By Davey Winder in Editorial

Posted in Windows, Microsoft on January 5, 2009 at 11:29 am

Permalink | Author Profile

We already know a lot about Windows 7, mainly because details of the new Microsoft OS have been leaking like crazy for the past four months. We know it will scale to 256 processors and could well feature some kind of instant on functionality. We know that it is unlikely to be the death of XP although Vista is a different proposition.

We know that some people have already got a legit free copy and that a beta is due real soon now. We also know that a pirate version of Windows 7 is doing the rounds as a Torrent from the likes of Pirate Bay.

We know that many people will be tempted into downloading this to take a sneak peek at the new OS, and we also know that this is a very bad idea. Funnily enough, we are not alone in reaching this conclusion, and Rob Rachwald of Fortify Software has pretty much the same reasoning us we do.

Look, forget for a moment the whole software theft, copyright issues, breaking the law stuff. What worries Rachwald, and us, is the fact that you could be opening yourself up to a whole slew of security risks by installing something as low level as an OS when that OS is not even an official Beta but rather a dodgy copy downloaded from a pirate site.

“Reports suggest that pirate versions of an early build of Windows 7, which is under alpha test with developers, is available for file-sharing on the Internet. Given the low level at which this operating system installs on a PC, we recommend users give the version a very wide berth because of the associated security risks” Rachwald says.

But it seems the message is not getting through, and there are unconfirmed reports that many tens of thousands of people have downloaded and installed Build 7000 of Windows 7 from Torrent sites, all with no idea if the build has been tampered with by hackers in some way.

What we do not know is just what malware might be hiding in the close on 2.5 Gb of download.

Not to mention the small matter that, as Rachwald warns “It’s highly unlikely that any IT security application will protect the new operating system from internally-coded malware, so the fall-out from trying an unofficial version of the new operating system could be quite severe.”

12345
Rated: 100% (2 votes)
Loading ... Loading ...

Previous Post | Next Post

 
 
Comments

Comment by Tyler Rosolowski - January 5, 2009 on 12:23 pm

Downloaded the beta, running it on three machines, no unusual internet activity, or spyware noticed.

Funny enough, since so many people are downloading, and playing with this copy of Win7, people would find out if it had spyware embedded deep inside itself.

Comment by dugz - January 5, 2009 on 2:07 pm

Is this funny or ironic
Run it in free Microsoft Virtual PC
Should keep U safe

Comment by Fredrik Olsson - January 5, 2009 on 9:53 pm

Why can not Microsoft simply make Windows 7 secure out of the box, without the need of third party solutions?

You know, like all other operating systems out there?

Most probably a buggy incomplete version of Windows is more secure for the end user; as it could be incompatioble with the malware out there, with some luck.

Comment by Same 'ol, same ol - January 6, 2009 on 3:17 pm

zzzz… change the record. People have been saying this for years. Scaremongers.

Comment by tombstoner - January 8, 2009 on 2:18 pm

Just the same old Microsoft overpriced junk.

Comment by links of london - October 16, 2009 on 8:09 am

It was a very nice idea! Just wanna say thank you for the information you have shared. Just continue writing this kind of post. I will be your loyal reader. Thanks again.

Make a comment

* required

* required

We stop spam using reCaptcha.
Type the words below and click Submit Comment.

   
Tag cloud

Backlash Education work global green Windows hoax rootkits Microsoft Texting graphics outsourcing Blog President ASUS linkedin computing Adobe Windows 7 Noro Linux malware Opinion xmas world of warcraft IDC Spotify economy IBM Flash McKinnon SMS Steve Ballmer Eee service snooping Programming IP Employment economics Bill Gates Psychic NASA ISPA Video technology patch management holidays terrorism law Project crime credit crunch fool HP credit card fraud ID Theft GMail Addiction exploit iPhone privacy chips Browsers Russia Jobs Obama Kaspersky PS3 theft China DNS Tesco information Digg banks Mars Application scam Top 500 Top 10 stupidity remote recession Browser Geeks Internet Explorer earth hour Gateway RAM FBI carbon copy Election Enterprise Paris Hilton Firefox Gartner Deal millions App fraud security Android Amazon Retail console email payment server shopping Parenting Architecture BSI report games Web Development worker printing digitise Apps BOFH Supercomputer scareware Gadget Finjan documentation acquisition compromise Europe hardware Mobile Phone Twitter Software Psion prison EU Pirate avatar Blogging Beta Music Death smartphone iPhone 3G Facebook family Mafia Windows Phone 7 Series tech iPhone 3GS Internet Kill Switch Notebooks home Battery InfoSec Sony e Press search data lawsuit Energy Experiment Guardian CAPTCHA gaming hacker Ballmer MSN Military code Palm Pre innovation Licensing Michael Jackson XP The Federation Olympics money hypervisor sick Madness social networking Porn data protection Game meme Hack iPod services Jesus Phone Vista adware Performance computing standards Lotus productivity OS Developers fake virus MessageLabs virtual machine Texas Instruments USA scan OCR Networks Acer cloud spending Mobile Phones fun Nintendo Steve Jobs admin ecommerce MSNBC Apple IT teleworking Cisco Meh size spam mail Rant man-in-the-middle campaign broadband Sex Kindle phishing Netbook Google Earth RATM e-commerce web 2.0 Business disclosure Conference web hacking virtualisation Space worm Zango Trojan AMD wifi Yahoo Trousers science Recall App Store Funny open source virtual world desktop Review workplace remote working stupid hubdub GSM Marketing Study Intel Nexus christmas patent Dell ISP Silverlight surveys Health eBook Advertising Johnny Depp black hat second life development Government botnet VM tax students Big Brother ROFL computer Data Centre VPN Google Harry Potter survey help museum Children library encryption banking memory dumb symantec mobile statistics migration office Palm books archiving Microchip betting Banned universe politics Army trust network copyright Media monetisation transactional security nightmare Voice NBC School news Eee PC management payments Research policy Rumour VeriSign storage MiniBook SSL poll debian HPC Digital Footprint Patents YouTube biometrics environment staffing
Advertisement
Advertisement