A4 Refereed article in a conference publication
Software Vulnerability Life Cycles and the Age of Software Products: An Empirical Assertion with Operating System Products
Authors: Jukka Ruohonen, Sami Hyrynsalmi, Ville Leppänen
Editors: John Krogstie, Haralambos Mouratidis, Jianwen Su
Conference name: International Workshop on Information Systems Security Engineering
Publication year: 2016
Book title : Advanced Information Systems Engineering Workshops -- CAiSE 2016 International Workshops, Ljubljana, Slovenia, June 13-17, 2016, Proceedings
Series title: Lecture Notes in Business Information Processing
Volume: 249
First page : 207
Last page: 218
Number of pages: 12
ISBN: 978-3-319-39563-0
eISBN: 978-3-319-39564-7
ISSN: 1865-1348
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39564-7_20
This empirical paper examines whether the age of software products can explain the turnaround between the release of security advisories and the publication vulnerability information. Building on the theoretical rationale of vulnerability life cycle modeling, this assertion is examined with an empirical sample that covers operating system releases from Microsoft and two Linux vendors. Estimation is carried out with a linear regression model. The results indicate that the age of the observed Microsoft products does not affect the turnaround times, and only feeble statistical relationships are present for the examined Linux releases. With this negative result, the paper contributes to the vulnerability life cycle modeling research by presenting and rejecting one theoretically motivated and previously unexplored question. The rejection is also a positive result; there is no reason for users to fear that the turnaround times would significantly lengthen as operating system releases age.