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Latest coverage for Patch Tuesday

Patch Tuesday tracks Microsoft's regular security updates, helping readers understand vulnerabilities, fixes, and risks affecting software users.

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Background for this topic.

Patch Tuesday is the second Tuesday of each month, when Microsoft publishes a scheduled set of security and quality updates for supported products. The term is also used broadly for the recurring monthly patch cycle that organizations use to review, test, and deploy vendor fixes. Releases may address vulnerabilities in operating systems, applications, browsers, and infrastructure components, with severity and affected versions varying by update.

For security teams, the release is a trigger for vulnerability-management work: identify exposed and supported assets, assess whether a flaw is being exploited or affects a critical system, and prioritize deployment accordingly. Testing and staged rollout can reduce compatibility and availability problems, while leaving internet-facing or unpatched systems exposed can increase the chance of compromise. Teams should also account for patches that require reboots, configuration changes, or dependent updates, and track exceptions with compensating controls. Critical fixes may warrant accelerated or emergency deployment rather than waiting for the normal maintenance window.

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Krebs on Security 3 years, 8 months ago

Patch Tuesday, November 2022 Election Edition

Let's face it: Having “2022 election” in the headline above is probably the only reason anyone might read this story today. Still, while most of us here in the United States are anxiously awaiting the results of how well we've patched our Democracy, it seems fitting that Microsoft Corp. today released gobs of security patches for its ubiquitous Windows operating systems. November's patch batch includes fixes for a whopping six zero-day security vulnerabilities that miscreants and malware are already exploiting in the wild.