Free Security Tool Ferrets out Unpatched Software
The tool is designed to inform users when their applications need patching.
Jeremy Kirk, IDG News Service
Tuesday, July 24, 2007 6:00 PM PDT

 users when their applications need patching.

Secunia ApS released the beta version of Personal Software Inspector 
for download
, a client program that periodically checks to see if new updates have been 
issued for some 4,200 applications. 

After installation, the tool inventories a computer's software and versions. It 
classifies programs as  "insecure," "end-of-life" or "up-to-date." The tool
then runs when the computer is started. 

When a patch is issued for a program on a user's computer, the tool displays a 
pop-up window in the lower right-hand corner of the screen, said Thomas 
Kristensen,
Secunia's chief technology officer. Another panel provides a download link for 
the patch.

Personal Software Inspector is intended to get users to apply patches soon 
after release, as hackers increasingly are trying to exploit vulnerabilities
in a wider range of applications. Users may also be uninformed about a new 
patch, Secunia said.

Some software programs, such as Apple Inc.'s QuickTime and the Firefox browser, 
will check on startup to see if patches are available and download and install
those patches. But Kristensen said not all programs do this, and sometimes 
those mechanisms don't work properly.

"I'll argue we are more reliable than other update mechanisms," Kristensen said.

Other products, such as VersionTracker, will notify users when a new software 
version is available. But Kristensen said Secunia's software and service is
focused on security, rather than merely alerting users when any new software 
version is released.

Secunia monitors the Web sites of a large number of software vendors for 
security advisories. Those advisories are put into a database, and the Personal
Software Inspector polls the database periodically to check for changes, 
Kristensen said. 

Secunia is licensing Personal Software Inspector to other vendors for use in 
security software suites. Two deals have been made so far, but Kristensen said
he could not yet reveal the companies.

http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,135031-pg,1/article.html

Vikas Kapoor,
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