A few hundred million Windows XP machines lay vulnerable on the Web today, a week after a zero-day exploit was discovered. Meanwhile, new approaches and
ideas from the academic world - that focus exclusively on children - may
give us hope for the future after all.

http://www.securityfocus.com/columnists/377

Sorry, but it's not going to happen. Yes, it is a serious vulnerability, but there will be no Armageddon here. Comparing this to the RPC vulnerability (which had worm potential) is specious.

Overall, I think community's coverage of wmf has been delivered with an ounce of perception, and a pound of obscurity. It's almost as if people *want* it to be worse than it is. I'm not surprised, of course. But regardless, my call is that we'll see a little activity here and there, the patch will come out, most will install it (or have it installed automatically) and the whole issue will fade away. But that's all.

We'll know for sure shortly, either way.

t

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"I may disapprove of what you say,
but I will defend to the death your
right to say it."

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