Mobile Version
Subscribe
Contact Us
About Us
Advertising
Editorial
SC UK
SC Aus/NZ
Home
News
Features
Opinions
Newsletters
Sectors
Company Moves
News Bytes
Products
First Looks
Reviews
Group Tests
About Reviews
Industry Innovators 2008
Blogs
The News Team Blog
The Data Breach Blog
SC Magazine Awards Blog
Buyers Guide
Whitepapers
Jobs
Events
SC Awards
Editorial Webcasts
Vendor Webcasts
Digital Download
eConferences
Podcasts
SC World Congress 2009
Research
Subscribe
Newsletters
Subscribe to SC
Issue Archive
Topic Center:
Financial Services
Health Care
Retail
Government
Compliance
RSS
|
Login
|
Register
Home
>
News
> Changes to XP SP3, Vista SP1 corrupt data in Microsoft's RMS
Changes to XP SP3, Vista SP1 corrupt data in Microsoft's RMS
Jim Carr
May 01, 2008
Print
Email
Reprint
Permissions
Font Size:
A
|
A
|
A
Related Articles
Microsoft delays release of latest XP service pack
It's heeere: Windows XP Service Pack 3 released
Blame XP SP3 problems on Microsoft, Symantec says
Vista SP2 RC now available
Related Links
SP3
More In News
Fourth of July spam
"Fourth of July" hacker jailed after hospital hack
iPhone hacker reveals SMS vulnerability
Spam increased in Q2, despite 3FN takedown
Rolling Stone magazine hacker arrested
Related Reviews
Service Pack 2 for Windows XP
Tags
Patch Management
Vulnerabilities & Flaws
Microsoft
Product News
Company
Microsoft Corp.
Microsoft has acknowledged that it postponed the release of Windows XP Service Pack 3 (SP3) because the upgrade includes changes to the operating system that can corrupt data in the company's retail point-of-sale (POS) software system. In addition, Microsoft has stopped automatic distribution of Windows Vista SP1 for the same reason.
Earlier in the week, Microsoft said its delay in releasing the web version of XP SP3 was due to a "compatibility issue" between XP SP3 and Microsoft's Dynamics Retail Management System (RMS), a POS and store-management application targeted to small- and medium-sized businesses (SMBs). It did not provide specific information about the issue then, however.
In reality, a Microsoft employee had provided details related to the issue in a post to the RMS support forum on April 24. "The Microsoft Dynamics Retail Management System (RMS) development team has identified problems when Windows Vista SP1 is installed," wrote Tom Berger, a Microsoft online support engineer, in a post available
here.
Windows Vista SP1 alters the manner in which Microsoft's SQL Server database product handles database records that include information from multiple tables, Berger added in his post. "All users who have applied Windows Vista SP1 will be affected."
Microsoft has also said that users running RMS on XP SP3 would face the same problem. Hence, the delay in releasing that upgrade, as well.
Until Microsoft releases a solution to the problem, Berger wrote that the company strongly recommends that RMS users should not install Windows Vista SP1. “If you have already installed it, you can uninstall it,” he added.
A fix for the data-corruption problem is currently in testing and will be available as soon as that process is complete, a Microsoft spokesman told SCMagazineUS.com. The spokesman said the company "does not have further information to share" on the data corruption problem.
"We plan to put filtering in place shortly to prevent Windows Update from offering Windows XP SP3 to Microsoft Dynamics RMS customers," the spokesman added. "Once this is in place, we plan to release Windows XP SP3 to the web."
Most Popular
Most Emailed
Most Recent
Juniper pulls researcher's Black Hat ATM talk
FTC settles with "scareware" defendant for $1.9 million
Trojans are fastest-growing data-stealing malware
Britney Spears Twitpic account hacked; fake death posted
"Iceman" hacker pleads guilty, faces 60 years
Appellate court affirms that Zango can't sue Kaspersky
Rolling Stone magazine hacker arrested
Mozilla Firefox 3.5 officially released
Malicious server used to propagate Zbot shut down
iPhone hacker reveals SMS vulnerability
Fake Microsoft "critical update" spam propagating trojan
It's official: Microsoft to offer free anti-malware service
TJX settles over breach with 41 states for $9.75 million
FTP login credentials at major corporations breached
Facebook bloggers reveal way to peek at private profiles
PCI-DSS: Not on health care provider's radar
Mozilla releases security fixes for Firefox
Hackers claim they raided sensitive T-Mobile information
Final settlement reached in CVS HIPAA violation suit
New security standards for mobile payments coming
"Fourth of July" hacker jailed after hospital hack
iPhone hacker reveals SMS vulnerability
Spam increased in Q2, despite 3FN takedown
Hot or not: SCAP is heating up
Rolling Stone magazine hacker arrested
Malicious server used to propagate Zbot shut down
Juniper pulls researcher's Black Hat ATM talk
Mozilla Firefox 3.5 officially released
Appellate court affirms that Zango can't sue Kaspersky
"Iceman" hacker pleads guilty, faces 60 years
Popular Topics
Analyst Reports & Industry Surveys
Anti Spam
Anti Virus
Application Security
Breaches & Exposures
Browser Flaws
Browsers And Security
CAN-SPAM Act
Compliance
Data Loss Prevention
Data Theft Security
DDoS
Endpoint Protection
External Threats
Facebook
Government
Industry Surveys
Lawbreakers & Cybercrime
Malware
Privacy
Social Networks
Spam
Spam Techniques
Trojans
Vulnerabilities & Flaws
Sponsored Links