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Microsoft Backtracks, Won't Patch April Bug For Windows 98/Me

Microsoft on Friday again rang "last call" for Windows 98 and Windows Millennium, reminding users that support will vanish for the two operating systems as of July 11. The company also announced that contrary to an earlier pledge, it will not provide a patch for those OSes to fix a critical vulnerability it first disclosed in April.

"First, support for Windows 98, Windows 98 Second Edition, and Windows Millennium Edition (Me) ends on July 11, 2006, which is the July 2006 Monthly Bulletin Release date," said Christopher Budd, security program manager with the Microsoft Security Response Center (MSRC) on the group's blog. "This means Microsoft will end public and technical support on July 11, 2006. This also includes security updates."

Microsoft began talking of the end of support for Windows 98 and Windows Me in April, a day after it released five security bulletins, including one marked MS06-015 that promised a later Windows 98/Me fix for a critical bug in Windows Explorer, the operating system's file manager.

Friday, however, Microsoft retracted that promise. "We've found that it's not feasible to make the extensive changes necessary to Windows Explorer on these older versions of Windows to eliminate the vulnerability," said Budd.

He described the difficulty as stemming from "significant enhancements to the underlying architecture" of Explorer during Windows 2000's development.

"Due to these fundamental differences [between Windows 98/Me and Windows 2000 and later], these changes would require reengineering a significant amount of a critical core component of the operating system," added Budd. "After such a reengineering effort, there would be no assurance that applications designed to run on these platforms would continue to operate on the updated system."

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