На NeoGAF эту статью обсуждали.
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread. ... =59&nojs=1
А вот цитата спеца по компьютерной безопасности.Anyway, here is the transcript of the news, unless the professor quote was taken from somewhere else, I don't know on what drug the Сonsumerist is on.
и замечание юзера с форумаMcDanel admits he doesn’t know that Sony’s web servers were vulnerable to attack. The authentication server he mentioned in the chats was running Apache 2.2.15, which was superseded in June 2010, but has no remote-access vulnerabilities listed on Apache’s website.
Absolutely not. No company roles out updates day one of release. Those updates may have bugs and be broken or create new leaks. Or may be incompatible with current in house applications.
Planning and testing are needed prior to rolling out a big update.
Mind you, we do this just for microsoft office updates alone. We still haven't rolled out windows 7, office 2007 for windows, office 2011 for mac, exchange 2010 or windows server 2008.
Some of it has to do with in house applications that aren't compatible. Some if it has to do with what corporate offices are doing and planning a synchronized or timed roll out.
A consumer may updated right away, but a company has more to consider before rolling anything out. Even service packs and patches. We turned off all updates dictated by Microsoft and apple and create our own patch service after in house testing.
So no, the bigger the company the less likely they are to roll out an update just because one is released.







