Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Web
  4. Legacy Archives

New Internet Explorer updates plug security holes in Adobe Flash Player, more

Add as a preferred source on Google

In keeping with the company’s monthly patch-release tradition, Microsoft released a slew of new security updates aimed at plugging holes in multiple versions of Internet Explorer.

Microsoft rates the update as “critical” for Internet Explorer versions 6 – 11. The versions of Windows that this applies to include Windows 8.1, Windows 7, Windows Vista, Windows RT 8.1, and multiple flavors of Windows Server.

Recommended Videos

Related: Windows 8/8.1 use still can’t touch Windows XP

Here’s how Microsoft describes the vulnerabilities that these updates address and plug.

“The most severe of these vulnerabilities could allow remote code execution if a user views a specially crafted webpage using Internet Explorer,” Microsoft says. “An attacker who successfully exploited these vulnerabilities could gain the same user rights as the current user. Customers whose accounts are configured to have fewer user rights on the system could be less impacted than those who operate with administrative user rights.”

Related: New Surface Pro 3 firmware claims to improve Wi-Fi, system stability

Keep in mind that, if you’re still using Windows XP (and recent statistics indicate that many of you still do), you’re out of luck. You won’t get these patches. Microsoft ended support for Windows XP back in April of this year.

If you have automatic updating enabled in Windows, you may already have installed these patches without even knowing it. Just in case, you should do a Windows Update scan to be sure.

Konrad Krawczyk
Former Computing Editor
Konrad covers desktops, laptops, tablets, sports tech and subjects in between for Digital Trends. Prior to joining DT, he…
Topics
The Mac mini will be short in supply for several months, confirms Apple
Good luck buying a Mac mini anytime soon
The M4 Mac mini on a desk.

Apple's smallest desktop PC is having issues with staying available. During the company's Q2 2026 earnings call, Apple confirmed that the Mac mini and Mac Studio may take "several months" to reach supply-demand balance. This came in response to a question about Mac availability, with Apple confirming that the demand had surpassed expectations.

Why the Mac mini is hard to find

Read more
Apple says users are snapping up Macs faster than ever and created a supply shortage
Apple MacBook Neo with users hands on it

Apple has a good problem on its hands: it simply cannot make enough Macs. On its fiscal Q2 2026 earnings call, CEO Tim Cook confirmed that demand for the Mac lineup has outpaced what the company can supply — and honestly, that's not a sentence you'd have expected to write a few years ago when Mac growth was chugging along in iPhone's shadow.

The culprits are interesting. The Mac Mini and Mac Studio are flying off the shelves, and Cook attributes a big chunk of that to people waking up to how capable Apple Silicon is for running AI tools and agentic workflows locally. That's a trend the company apparently didn't fully see coming. When your own CEO admits you "undercalled the demand," that's a genuine surprise.

Read more
Google Meet’s AI note-taker just got a whole lot better and less overwhelming
Your meeting notes just got smarter, more customizable, and way more actionable.
Google meet new meeting note feature

Google Meet's "Take notes for me,” which the company announced back in 2024, is already a lifesaver for anyone who has to juggle typing notes and actually participating in a meeting.

Since then, the company has added numerous features to make its AI meeting notetaker service even better, including the ability to take in-person meeting notes, create longer meeting notes, and more. 

Read more