
Summary created by Smart Answers AI
In summary:
- Microsoft now recommends installing Windows updates within three days due to AI-powered cyber threats that exploit vulnerabilities faster than ever before.
- PCWorld reports that hackers use artificial intelligence to quickly target unpatched Windows systems, making delayed updates extremely risky for users.
- Microsoft patched a record 206 vulnerabilities in June and uses its own AI tool MDASH to identify security flaws in Windows code.
Microsoft has flipped its stance regarding the installation of Windows updates. You should now install these updates on your Windows computers as soon as possible.
The reason for this change in recommendation? AI.
With rampant adoption and use of AI, hackers can now detect and exploit security vulnerabilities in unpatched Windows PCs to a degree never before seen. In the run-up to July’s Patch Tuesday, Jeremy Chapman, a director at Microsoft 365, stated that no one should delay Windows updates for longer than three days, reports Windows Latest:
“We’ve updated our recommendations for deploying Windows updates to less than three days as the deferral period for quality updates […] setting deadlines for those updates to zero or one day, and the update grace period to a maximum of two days.”
Even as hackers ramp up exploitation of vulnerabilities, Microsoft has been fixing them at a faster pace. For example, in June, Microsoft patched a record 206 vulnerabilities. All of this makes Patch Tuesday updates more important than ever—you don’t want to skip any of these security patches for your PC.
As soon as a security vulnerability becomes public knowledge, AI can help attackers analyze the problem and develop an exploit within a matter of hours. That’s why the previously common practice of postponing installation of updates by several days or weeks—to wait and see whether the updates cause issues and render systems unstable—is no longer smart. Microsoft no longer wants companies and users to leave Windows PCs unpatched for weeks on end.
Fortunately, hackers aren’t the only ones employing AI in cybersecurity. Microsoft has developed its own AI-based tool for finding latent vulnerabilities: MDASH, which scans Windows code for suspicious patterns. Then, all AI agents in the system communicate with one another to diagnose actual problems.
Tip: Whether you keep your Windows up to date, you need proper antivirus protections if you want your PC to remain secure and private. Check out our picks for the best antivirus software for Windows as well as best VPN services to stay ahead of security problems.
This article originally appeared on our sister publication PC-WELT and was translated and localized from German.