Full Disclosure mailing list archives

RE: Windows Update


From: "joe" <mvp () joeware net>
Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2004 09:01:54 -0400

If that is your stance, you should probably have it for AV updates as well.
There have been various AV updates that have been known to break
functionality and blue screen boxes. I recall one update for one of my
customers that had blown up a good many web servers and local site file and
print servers (hundreds of servers) and this is with an AV Update that was
approved by and placed on the distribution server by central security. 

Anyway, versus completely shutting down WU, you can configure to automatic
download without installation. 

All that being said, actively professionally maintained servers are in a
different boat than most machines that will be running WU. In a large
properly firewalled and protected corporate environment, I don't think the
client support group would really depend on automatic updates from outside
the company, they would use SUS or some other deployment mechanism. If using
some other deployment mechanism, WU would be off. Either way, patches would
be tested before being deployed, it wouldn't be automatic. 

That being said, once you get to x machines with x being a function of your
resources available to do testing, the number of LOB apps you have running,
and how bad the hole is being plugged you will run into occasion where you
can not test everything and simply have to release. One would hope that this
will be less frequent if you have XP SP2 deployed and have the firewall up
and running without turning it into swiss cheese but until we see the next
worm type attack and see if XP SP2 is safer we can't for sure say anything.
If the biggest issues end up requiring some sort of people interaction, then
that is quite a win in and of itself. 

  joe
 

-----Original Message-----
From: full-disclosure-admin () lists netsys com
[mailto:full-disclosure-admin () lists netsys com] On Behalf Of Über GuidoZ
Sent: Saturday, August 21, 2004 7:56 PM
To: FD
Subject: Re: [Full-disclosure] Windows Update

Umm, hold on a sec here... 

(snip from "James Tucker"):
There really should be no reason why you would want to disable the  
Automatic Updates service anyway, unless you are rolling out updates  
using a centralised distribution system, in which case you would not 
need it anyway.

I believe you are missing one fundamental point: SPs and updates are
notorious for breaking something else. (Especially from Microsoft.) Granted,
if fixing a security weakness breaks something you're using, then that
aspect could have been written better. However, that still doesn't fix it
when an entire business network goes down and YOU are the one responsible. I
do not allow ANY automatic updates (except for virus definitions) to run on
ANY networks I am in charge of. I take the time (like every good sysadmin
should) to look over each update before applying it so I know three things:

1. What it's fixing/patching
2. Why it's fixing/patching it
3. What will be the end result of the fix/patch

If you would simply allow updates and SPs to have free reign over your
system(s) without taking any time to look over those updates, you're going
to be one busy and irritated sysadmin. That is, if you still have a job
after a little bit.

~G

P.S. Don't take my word for it. Look here:
 - http://www.infoworld.com/article/04/08/12/HNdisablesp2_1.html
 - http://www.pcworld.idg.com.au/index.php/id;1183008015;fp;2;fpid;1
 - http://www.integratedmar.com/ecl-usa/story.cfm?item=18619
 - http://www.vnunet.com/news/1157279
 - Or, find the other 200+ articles by searching Google News
    for "disable automatic update sp2"  =)

On Sat, 21 Aug 2004 18:51:40 -0300, James Tucker <jftucker () gmail com> wrote:
Here I found that I can have BITS and Automatic Updates in "manual", 
Windows Update works fine here. It may be a good idea to refresh the 
MMC console page, as you will probably find that at time the service 
had shut down if and when BITS was stopped prematurely (i.e. when it 
was in use).

There really should be no reason why you would want to disable the 
Automatic Updates service anyway, unless you are rolling out updates 
using a centralised distribution system, in which case you would not 
need it anyway.

If you are worried about system resources, you should look into how 
much the service really uses; the effect is negligable, in fact there 
is more impact if you select (scroll over) a large number of 
application shortcuts (due to the caching system) than if you leave 
Automatic Updates on. If you are worried about your privacy and you 
dont believe that the data sent back and forth has not been checked 
before, then you surely dont want to run Windows Updates ever. If you 
want to cull some real system resources and have not already done so, 
turn the Help and Support service to manual, that will save ~30mb on 
boot, up until the first use of XP help; this will stop help links 
from programs from forwarding to the correct page, until the service 
has loaded once.

As for worry over using bandwidth on your internet service, again, you 
want to check this out as its a trickle service, not a flood. BITS 
does not stand for Bloody Idiots Trashing Service; it means what it 
says on the tin.

On Fri, 20 Aug 2004 14:30:22 -0700, David Vincent


<support () sleepdeprived ca> wrote:
joe wrote:

Yep, this is how it works now.

You control whether Windows Update is updating or not via the 
security panel in the control panel applets (wscui.cpl).


To eb complete, I should have mentioned I have Automatic Updates 
turned off in the control panel.  I also had the service disabled 
before applying SP2 and venturing to Windows Update v5.

Of course if you aren't using automatic update you could always 
disable the service and just reenable when you go to do the update, 
or don't use windows update at all and just pull the downloads 
separately. We are talking about a single command line to reenable 
that service


Yep.

Is it a pain? Yes, for those who like to run minimal services. Is 
it a security issue or life threatening, probably not.


Agreed.

-d



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Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html



--
Peace. ~G

_______________________________________________
Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html

_______________________________________________
Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html


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