New Cybersecurity report now available from Microsoft

Trustworthy Computing released volume 15 of the Microsoft Security Intelligence Report, which provides threat intelligence and analysis of cyber threats in over 100 countries and regions worldwide on Tuesday.

“Among the numerous key findings in the new report, one of the more interesting things to surface was the increased risk of using unsupported software,” writes Microsoft Director of Trustworthy Computing Tim Rains in a blog post. “The report found that in the first half of 2013, nearly 17 percent of computers worldwide that run Microsoft real-time security products encountered malware that tried to get on or stay on those systems, but Microsoft anti-malware products blocked this from happening.”

What’s interesting to note is the difference between encountering malware and actually being infected by it. During the first half of 2013, currently supported versions of Windows desktop operating systems (Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7 and Windows 8) all had roughly similar malware encounter rates – between 12 and 20 percent. But Windows XP systems had an infection rate that was six times higher than Windows 8, Rains writes.

Head on over to Microsoft on the Issues for the rest of this story. You can also read this press release over on the Microsoft News Center for more information.

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Posted by Jeff Meisner
Editor, The Official Microsoft Blog

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