After traveling around the past few months in various countries it
looks like getting rid of Windows XP is going to take quite a while. It
is probably due to the fact that it has expired that I noticed it more
than usual, but XP is certainly everywhere. You see it at airports on
display boards, Point of Sale systems. In one overseas country the
computers in customs as well as the railway displays and control systems
and hospitals.
Having obsolete operating systems in a corporate environment is bad
enough, there are still many organisations that utilise XP internally.
However as part of critical infrastructure it worries me slightly more.
Now most of us can't do much outside of our little sphere of
influence, but it is time for the operating system to go.
So if junior needs something to do over the next few weeks set them a
challenge. Identify all remaining XP devices connected to the network.
Categorise them into real XP and embedded XP ( Still some support
available for those). Then develop a strategy to get rid of them.
If getting rid of them is not an option and there will those of you
in that situation, at least look for ways of protecting them a bit
better. Consider network segmentation, application whitelisting,
endpoint solutions (some will still work on XP). As an absolute minimum
at least know where they are and how they are being used.
Seek, identify and remove away.
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