The MS10-025 security update, released on April 13, was for Windows 2000 users who were also running Windows Media Services. This software -- used to stream multimedia over the Internet -- had a buggy component called the Windows Media Unicast Service that could be exploited to run unauthorized software on the PC.
Unfortunately, Microsoft's initial patch didn't quite fix the problem, according to Microsoft Security Program Manager Jerry Bryant.
"There was an additional variant [of the bug] discovered internally after the initial report," he said Tuesday in an e-mail interview. "The update addressed that variant but not the originally reported issue. When we discovered this, we thought it was important to pull the update and let customers know that they were still in a vulnerable state if they had applied the update already."
Microsoft pulled the update late last week. On Tuesday, the company re-issued the patch with the underlying bug finally fixed.
Microsoft operating systems other than Windows 2000 are not affected by the flaw; neither are Windows 2000 systems in their default configurations. Users must have added on the Windows Media Services to be at risk.
For those customers, however, the update is rated critical by Microsoft because the flaw would not be hard for attackers to exploit.
"We have not seen any active attacks for this but we know that there is proof-of-concept code out there," Bryant said. "Customers with affected systems should install the update as soon as possible."