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Microsoft: Vista Infected 62% Less Often Than XP

The study found that for all Microsoft operating systems that the most current service pack is always the least infected and Vista was infected less-often than XP.

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Windows Vista is dramatically more secure than Windows XP, according Microsoft's latest Security Intelligence Report, released Monday. The infection rate of Windows Vista SP1 was 61.9 percent less than Windows XP SP3, the company said.

The report covers the first half of 2009 and is the seventh such twice-yearly report the company has issued.

The study found that for all Microsoft operating systems that the most current service pack is always the least infected, based on infections per 1,000 computers running each OS. Windows 7 was not included in the report; here is our guide to Win7 security.

The finding is not surprising considering that service packs "roll-up" all previous patches. Users who install the packs may practice safer computing overall than those who do not, Microsoft said.

Other key findings:

Microsoft collects data on infections from its free security products such as Windows Defender, the Malicious Software Removal Tool (MSRT), Security Essentials as well as ones the company sells.

The report is available as a more than 230-page document or a 19-page summary. Both may be downloaded here. The long version includes best practices and a great deal of educational material, with the expected Microsoft slant.

David Coursey tweets as @techinciter and can be contacted via his Web site.

David Coursey



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