Microsoft Criticized For Lack Of Transparency And Speed In Fixing Vulnerabilities

Microsoft is facing criticism for its lack of transparency and speed when it comes to responding to reports of flaws.

A clear example of Microsoft’s slow response showed after it took the company five months and three patches to successfully fix a critical vulnerability in Azure.

While criticizing Microsoft, Orca Security researcher Tzah Pahima revealed that despite the urgent need to fix the bug, Microsoft responders were slow to grasp its severity. Microsoft’s first two patches to fix the vulnerability failed to achieve the task, and it was only on Tuesday that another patch was able to fix the bug completely.

Critics also accused Microsoft of failing to fix a critical Windows vulnerability called Follina until it has been actively exploited in the wild for more than seven weeks.

Security firm Tenable accused Microsoft of failing to transparently fix vulnerabilities involving Azure Synapse.

Tenable Chairman and CEO Amit Yoran complained in a post titled “Microsoft’s Vulnerability Practices Put Customers At Risk” about a “lack of transparency in cybersecurity” from Microsoft a day before the lifting of the 90-day embargo on critical bugs that his company had reported.

The sources for this piece include an article in Arstechnica.

Top Stories

Related Articles

May 31, 2025 A coordinated supply chain attack has compromised between 500 and 1,000 e-commerce websites by exploiting vulnerabilities in 21 more...

May 31, 2025 A widely used open-source Go library, easyjson, used in healthcare, finance and even defence has come under scrutiny more...

May 31, 2025 (EDITORIAL) A messaging tool used by Trump administration officials to archive encrypted Signal messages has been hacked — more...

April 22, 2025 Anthropic, a leading artificial intelligence company, anticipates that AI-powered virtual employees could begin operating within corporate networks as more...

Jim Love

Jim Is and author and pud cast host with over 40 years in technology.