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Microsoft Apologizes To Rival

Geoffrey.landis writes "Microsoft apologized to rival software vendor Corel Corp. for saying that Corel's file format posed a security risk, and issued a set of tools to unblock file types that had been blocked by default in the December Office 2003 service pack. In his blog on the Microsoft site, David Leblanc says 'We did a poor job of describing the default format changes.' He goes on to explain, 'We stated that it was the file formats that were insecure, but this is actually not correct. A file format isn't insecure — it's the code that reads the format that's more or less secure.' As noted by News.com, 'it is the parsing code that Office 2003 uses to open and save the file types that is less secure.' Larry Seltzer at pcmag.com also blogs the story."

5 of 151 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Boiled down by davester666 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes. Rather than fixing their implementation, they just made it more difficult for users to use their implementation.

    It just happens to be that some of their faulty implementations are for reading formats for competing products... You are not permitted to draw any inference from this fact.

    --
    Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
  2. Re:Boiled down by joe_bruin · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It boiled down to Microsoft, instead of fixing their bad file parsing code, disabled it so customers couldn't access their older files AND blamed Corel's file format. Notice that they are still not admitting that their code is bad or fixing it, they're just re-enabling their buggy code because customers complained that they couldn't open files.

  3. Re:Business as usual by mr_mischief · · Score: 5, Informative

    Nah. Just 4 months.

    The blocking of the file formats was from September's Office 2003 Service Pack 3 update. The KB article was probably issued the same time, but it was edited yesterday (and the MSKB doesn't show the original date, just the last review date and the number of times edited).

    The apology was yesterday.

  4. Nothing Worth Selling by WED+Fan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hope you didn't lose any sales.

    Uh, sparky, the assumption that Corel has anything of value to market and sell is a bit of a stretch. They have so mismanaged the brand that it is almost criminal what they did to their office products.

    I was a big time WordPerfect user. I tried to stick around through their sale to Novell and lack of effort from them. Later, sold to Corel, the company sat on it and did nothing allowing Microsoft Word to over take it and take over Office Suite dominance. This is what turned MS into the big monster it is now.

    Corel should be apologizing to the world.

    They took a great product and took a dump on it. This would be like DC turning the Superman franchise over to Alexander Salkind...oh, wait, they did.

    --
    Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong fix.
  5. Amazing. by Scottoest · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I remember the /. posting about this topic last week, where everyone rightfully corrected them about file formats not inherently being insecure. There was the usually geejawing about "M$" being brutal thugs, and idiots, etc. etc. etc. Y'know, par for the course on this website.

    However, the most entertaining posts on this website, are in cases where Microsoft admits error, or does something "good". We then get to see these same people do logical contortionist routines about how they must have been threatened legally, or baseless conjecturing about what must have been in it for them.

    A lot of people here talk a lot about how Microsoft should listen more to the "geek" community. Places like this remind me of precisely why they don't bother.

    Slashdot is generally pretty great for my daily fill of tech news. But man oh man, when it comes to Microsoft, any front of being unbiased is quickly cast off.

    "kdawson" is probably the worst of the bunch, too.

    - Scott