Windows Vista, not XP, offers up highest infection rates


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Windows Vista, Not XP, Offers Up Highest Infection Rates
by infosecurity
 
Windows XP may be the operating system getting the most flack for opening up users to hackers and exploits, but it turns out that Windows Vista and Windows 7 experienced the highest infection rates in the fourth quarter of 2013.
Microsoft discontinued support – including security patches – for XP in April (with an exception), opening up the door for a rash of zero-days attacking the system – so it’s likely that these numbers will radically shift for the second-quarter report. But Microsoft’s latest Security Intelligence Report detailed the vulnerability levels in various versions of Windows prior to the end-of-life cutoff for XP, and disclosed that Windows Vista, which was released in 2007, has an infection rate of 3.24%, compared to 2.42% for Windows XP, released in 2001. And at 2.59%, Windows 7 falls in the middle.
Unsurprisingly, the most current OS, Windows 8.1, clocks in as the safest of them all, carrying an infection rate of just 0.08%. Already-obsolete Windows 8 increases that significantly however, to 1.73%. Microsoft noted in the report that the infection rates by OS also tend to be affected by the specific threats for the studied period. For instance: “There was an increase in computers cleaned from malware in the fourth quarter of 2013. This increase was predominately due to a new detection added to Microsoft’s security products for a threat known as Rotbrow. Rotbrow is a threat that uses deceptive tactics instead of software vulnerabilities to trick its victims into installing malware. Rotbrow was more prevalent on Windows 7 and Windows Vista, likely for monetization purposes (e.g. click fraud, etc.). It is important to note that the rise in computers cleaned in the chart below is not an indication of the operating systems security effectiveness”.
It’s important to keep in mind that, going forward, the overall security impact of non-updated XP systems is much larger for this camp given the larger install base.
Net Marketshare noted that Windows XP’s usage only declined by about a percentage point compared to March, and as of April still accounted for 26.29% of PCs globally. Vulnerability management expert Secunia, meanwhile, has released UK install base figures for Windows XP, finding that one month after the end-of-life deadline, more than one in six (17%) private UK PC users is still likely to be vulnerable to new exploits that Microsoft is no longer patching.
 
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