Microsoft has yet to explain how or why the lapse occurred.
Highly skilled technical staff are expensive, and it turns out that some people still use Windows when Microsoft doesn’t hire the talent necessary to keep Windows working.
Edit: Also, bribes from three letter government agencies are probably pretty nice.
I cannot make certain teams at my work give a shit about known security vulnerabilities in libraries they use, since they don’t trip our internal scanners. People have their own priorities. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Highly skilled technical staff are expensive, and it turns out that some people still use Windows when Microsoft doesn’t hire the talent necessary to keep Windows working.
Edit: Also, bribes from three letter government agencies are probably pretty nice.
The number of times I’ve seen a fix not get pushed because somebody got laid off is a lot higher than you might think.
I cannot make certain teams at my work give a shit about known security vulnerabilities in libraries they use, since they don’t trip our internal scanners. People have their own priorities. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯