Microsoft warned users Monday that it will drop support for Office 2003 Service Pack 2 in three weeks, and it urged them to upgrade to a newer service pack that was involved in a dust-up earlier this year over blocked file formats.
The company's policy is to support an Office service pack for 12 months after it releases a successor. Microsoft rolled out Office 2003 SP3 in September 2007. It always extends that 12-month period to the following month's second Tuesday, the day it usually issues security updates.
"Any security updates released on or before October 14 will support both Service Packs 2 and 3," said a Microsoft employee identified only as "David" on a company blog. "Security updates released after October 14 will support only Service Pack 3."
Microsoft has patched 14 vulnerabilities in Office 2003 SP2 in the past two months alone.
Office 2003 SP3 also made news earlier this year when Microsoft apologized to rival Corel Corp. for blocking some of that software developer's file formats on the grounds that they represented security risks.
Office 2003 SP3 instituted new security policies that automatically blocked a number of older file types; most of them were Microsoft-designed formats, although some third-party formats were included in the ban. Microsoft defended the move last January, when it said that "some older file formats are insecure" and that "the decision to block the formats is strictly to protect your machine from being compromised."
Users complained loudly on Microsoft's support forums soon after Office 2003 SP3 was issued.
Monday, Microsoft urged users to update to SP3. The update, which is free to Office 2003 users, can be downloaded from Microsoft's site.
Although Microsoft launched Office 2007 in late 2006, it will continue to support Office 2003 until early April 2014, according to its product life cycle site.
References
Latest on Office Apps
- ISO publishes Office Open XML specification
- Sun releases StarOffice 9, supports Mac OS X
- Microsoft: Mac, Linux systems can access Office Web
- Microsoft demonstrates online Office
- MS finally to bring Office to the Web, Windows smart phones
- Google offers Gmail users a window into Calendar and Docs
- Microsoft Word turns 25
- Forecast has Office, Vista going in opposite directions
- Office 2007 Service Pack 2 due early '09
- 16 e-mail and instant messaging boosters
Software Essentials
- Ballmer: Yahoo acquisition won't happen
- Sun is a software company, new top shareholder says
- Forecast has Office, Vista going in opposite directions
- Interview with The Pirate Bay founder
- The future of software testing
- Bill Gates predicts software revolution
- 'Warez' software pirate sentenced to probation
- Mobile app development moves beyond CRM, but slowly
- Tibco backing Microsoft Silverlight
- Most top banks already using virtualization
TechWorld Jobs (beta)
Recent Jobs
Whitepapers
- Email Archiving Implementation: Five Costly Mistakes to Avoid
- Still Sneaking In: The Threats Your Security Tools Aren't Telling You About
- Discover the advantages of an open architecture multi-vendor network solution
- Choices in Storage Architecture for Oracle Environments
- Enterprise Wireless WLAN Security
TechWorld Blogs
-

TalkingTech
The view from the top of IT with TechWorld Editor Rodney Gedda
-

Entrenched
Cooking up better code, IDG's developers reveal some of their secrets
-

Broadband Voice
Darren Pauli digs in from the front line of Australia's broadband battleground
Recent blog posts
- An open storage stack? I like the sound of that
- The mobile clone wars: fighting for a better phone experience
- Stopping the "Clean Feed"
- Identifying web platforms
- Clean Feed ‘not technically possible’
- No Clean Feed - well duh!
- Conroy's content cops still on the cards
- Will open source ruin the economy? Please help
- Linux kernel 2.6.27 is out!
- Falling off the ob_start stack
Recent comments
- Hello this is Brianna
11 hours 2 min ago - Turn any PC into a media center
1 day 53 min ago - How About the Correct Title?
1 day 16 hours ago - who are you kidding?
1 day 21 hours ago - Seriously, how much did they pay for this advertisement
3 days 11 hours ago - SF Bay Area - free Seminar on Enterprise Cloud Computing
3 days 15 hours ago - video conferening but not telepresence...
3 days 22 hours ago - SAMSUNG OLED 40" TECHNOLOGY
4 days 6 hours ago - What was the question again, oh well this was prepared earlier
6 days 14 hours ago - Worldwide broadband prices continue to drop which means ? in AU
6 days 14 hours ago - Not a Problem Here in Australia and New Zealand
1 week 1 day ago - Clear the air
1 week 2 days ago - Tabbed browsing, Quick Find,
1 week 5 days ago - Microsoft details plans for new social bookmarking tool
1 week 6 days ago - There is a 3rd party tool
2 weeks 1 day ago - Demise of Windows
2 weeks 1 day ago - new OS
2 weeks 1 day ago - Re: Favicon
2 weeks 2 days ago - Multi Camera Kino
2 weeks 2 days ago - Favicon
2 weeks 3 days ago



