The most recent out-of-band patch from Adobe for Reader and Acrobat seems to have generated renewed interest in the problem of application level patching — some call it 3rd party application patching.
I couldn’t be more pleased. If you operate in a Microsoft shop — and who doesn’t — the issue of patching applications should be a hot topic. In 2009, the top most attacked software applications didn’t come from Microsoft. They came from Adobe, Apple, and Sun. The SANS Technology Institute went so far as to suggest that we should all stop using Adobe products until the corporation takes the issue seriously and solves its security problems.
Shavlik has been singing this tune for years. But just recently, there’s been a storm of emails on patchmanagement.org, Adobe and Microsoft appear to be at least willing to work together, and today Shavlik announced the release of Shavlik SCUPdates.
Shavlik SCUPdates delivers to SCCM users what Microsoft doesn’t — a way to patch 3rd party applications without increasing the workload on SCCM administrators. SCUPdates is a catalog that is imported into System Center Updates Publisher and then synchronized with SCCM. The patch assessment and deployment logic is merged right into SCCM along with patches Microsoft applications and operating systems.
Shavlik is providing a single, trusted source for multiple vendors, multiple products, multiple versions. Priceless. Check out SCUPdates on our website or get more information from Rod Trent at myITforum.