Since Canonical offers support for Karmic until April 2011, I don't
think they have the choice but to fix things of this importance.
Upgrading to Lucid right away is not a very good idea for most users
either, since it's gonna bring with it a truckload of new bugs, as
happens with each release, including the last LTS. It's like picking
between Scylla and Charybdis:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scylla_and_Charybdis

Now instead of pushing each version of Ubuntu as Linux for Humans and
all the other hype, I think non-LTS versions should receive a permanent
Beta label, and support for them should be deprecated as soon as the
next version arrives. This is basically what happens already, so why not
make it official? On the other hand the LTS version should receive extra
work to be stable *on release*, and release should be delayed for up to
three months is it still has critical bugs on popular hardware, and
stuff like that.

In the meanwhile, if you offer support, try to give at least equivalent
support as Microsoft... they're still supporting Windows XP (how old is
that?) for security, and they certainly wouldn't let unpatched a flaw
that prevents you from changing your password: imagine the uproar!

-- 
[users-admin] Password is reset to old value when it's been changed by running 
about-me
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/490093
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