Some bugs patched in Windows applications might not be more harmful than originally thought. Due to these errors, hundreds of programs become vulnerable. "It was a shocking surprise," stated Mitjà Kolsek, CEO of Acros Security. "It seems most all Windows applications are sticky vulnerabilities." American researcher HD Moore reported he had seen about 40 Windows applications stick a common flaw, but he refuse to be named the program or go into detail about this error.

He stated Kolsek Acros has been finding into a new class of vulnerabilities in several months. They found more than 200 applications from about 100 manufacturers leading application leaky, contains over 500 exact errors. He noted that the company has reported its findings to Microsoft for more than four months ago.

In other words, the issue is more extensive than what he previously said Moore. According Kolsek, fault lies in the means majority applications load and execute the file. "Dll", ". Exe” and Com. He named this class of error is remote planting binary and stated the flaw could easily be exploited.