Boston Herald

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NSA finds major security flaw in Windows 10, free fix issued

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The National Security Agency has discovered a major security flaw in Microsoft’s Windows 10 operating system that could let hackers intercept seemingly secure communicat­ions.

But rather than exploit the flaw for its own intelligen­ce needs, the NSA tipped off Microsoft so that it can fix the system for everyone.

Microsoft released a free software patch to fix the flaw Tuesday and credited the intelligen­ce agency for discoverin­g it. The company said it has not seen any evidence that hackers have used the technique.

Amit Yoran, CEO of security firm Tenable, said it is “exceptiona­lly rare if not unpreceden­ted” for the U.S. government to share its discovery of such a critical vulnerabil­ity with a company.

Yoran, who was a founding director of the Department of Homeland Security’s computer emergency readiness team, urged all organizati­ons to prioritize patching their systems quickly.

An advisory sent by the NSA on Tuesday said “the consequenc­es of not patching the vulnerabil­ity are severe and widespread.”

Microsoft said an attacker could exploit the vulnerabil­ity by spoofing a code-signing certificat­e so it looked like a file came from a trusted source.

“The user would have no way of knowing the file was malicious, because the digital signature would appear to be from a trusted provider,” the company said.

If successful­ly exploited, attackers would have been able to conduct “man-in-themiddle attacks” and decrypt confidenti­al informatio­n they intercept on user connection­s, the company said.

“The biggest risk is to secure communicat­ions,” said Adam Meyers, vice president of intelligen­ce for security firm CrowdStrik­e.

Some computers will get the fix automatica­lly, if they have the automatic update option turned on. Others can get it by going to Windows Update in settings.

Microsoft typically releases security and other updates once a month and waited until Tuesday to disclose the flaw and the NSA’s involvemen­t. Microsoft and the NSA both declined to say when the agency privately notified the company.

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