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Adobe Changes Its Tune On Forcing Paid Upgrade To Fix Security Flaws

wiredmikey writes with a followup to Thursday's news that Adobe was recommending paid software upgrades in lieu of fixing security holes in some of its applications. After receiving criticism for the security bulletin, Adobe changed its mind and announced that it's developing patches to fix the vulnerabilities. "Developing a patch, especially for three different applications, can be costly and time consuming. Developing these patches consumes development resources, then must run through a QA process, and the patch needs to be communicated and distributed to users. And for a company like Adobe with a massive customer base using its Photoshop, Illustrator, and Flash Professional, the bandwidth cost alone can be substantial. For a popular product that was just over two years old, providing a fix to address a serious security flaw its what customers deserve. And while Adobe may have originally tried to sneak by without addressing the issue and pushing users to upgrade to its new product, the company made the right move in the end."

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  1. Re:Write fewer bugs. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    Adobe software manager here. You have no clue what you're talking about. Outsourcing all of our development to India is much cheaper than hiring competent programmers. And competent programmers would rather tell us how stupid it is to rewrite our user interface in Flash. I'm not paying you to tell us what's stupid, I'm paying you to do stupid things.