Tag Archive for: SSU

SSU dismantles an infowar botnet. HIMARS, atrocities, provocation, and disinformation. A Russian disinformation mouthpiece raises the prospect that there are highly placed traitors in the GRU. Rewards for Justice works toward securing elections from Russian meddling. The case that Russia’s war is genocidal. The case that pan-Slavism has found wayward, but sincere, expression in Mr. Putin’s war.


At a glance.

  • SSU dismantles an infowar botnet.
  • HIMARS, atrocities, provocation, and disinformation.
  • A Russian disinformation mouthpiece raises the prospect that there are highly placed traitors in the GRU.
  • Rewards for Justice works toward securing elections from Russian meddling.
  • The case that Russia’s war is genocidal.
  • The case that pan-Slavism has found wayward, but sincere, expression in Mr. Putin’s war.

Ukraine claims to have taken down a massive Russian bot farm.

The Security Service of Ukraine (SSU) says it dismantled a large Russian botnet operation that was being used to spread Russian propaganda and disinformation. The bots, about a million strong, were herded from locations within Ukraine itself, in the cities of Kyiv, Kharkiv, and Vinnytsia, BleepingComputer reports. Their output took the form of social media posts from inauthentic accounts associated with fictitious personae. The SSU describes the operation as follows: “Their latest ‘activities’ include the distribution of content on the alleged conflict between the leadership of the President’s Office and the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine as well as a campaign to discredit the first lady. To spin destabilizing content, perpetrators administered over 1 million of their own bots and numerous groups in social networks with an audience of almost 400,000 users. In the course of a multi-stage special operation, the SSU exposed the leader of this criminal group. He is a russian citizen who has lived in Kyiv and positioned himself as a ‘political expert.’”

On the other side of the information war, BleepingComputer also reported earlier this week that Ukrainian hacktivists, “Torrents of Truth,” were bundling instructions on how to bypass Russian censorship into movie torrents whose intended audience would be Russian viewers.

HIMARS, atrocities, provocation, and disinformation.

The killing of Ukrainian prisoners of war in Olenivka is by now clearly a Russian atrocity–the prisoners were apparently murdered by their captors. (And we note in passing that the International Committee of the Red Cross still has not been given the access to the prison international law requires.) The prisoners did not die in a…

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Microsoft pulls a second Windows SSU for blocking security updates


Microsoft pulls a second Windows SSU for blocking security updates

Microsoft has pulled one more buggy Windows 10 servicing stack update (SSU), KB4601390, because it blocked customers from installing this month’s security and Cumulative Updates.

The company resolved the update installation problems by releasing a new servicing stack update (SSU), KB5001079.

Windows 10 SSUs provide servicing stack fixes, the component used by Windows 10 to download and install updates correctly.

They can be automatically delivered to devices via Windows Update or mass deployed through the Windows Server Update Services (WSUS) on enterprise networks.

You can also install them manually using standalone update packages available through the Microsoft Update Catalog. 

Windows updates getting stuck

Microsoft pulled the faulty KB4601390 SSU (Google cache link here) after removing another problematic Windows 10 SSU, KB4601392, earlier this week.

The removals were caused by Windows 10 security updates getting stuck during the installation process at 24%.

The issue was first observed by users who tried installing the February 9 security updates on Windows Server 2016 and Windows 10, version 1607.

“After installing the SSU KB4601390, installation of the Cumulative Update from Windows Update might not progress past 24%,” Microsoft said on Wednesday, after acknowledging the issue.

Since Microsoft removed the buggy KB4601390 SSU, it will no longer be offered through the Microsoft Update Catalog or Windows 10 devices searching for updates through Windows Update.

Customers must install the new KB5001079 SSU before attempting to installing the February 9, 2021 security updates.

What to do if you’ve already installed KB4601390

Although SSUs cannot be uninstalled from computers after being deployed, Microsoft says that customers who have already installed KB4601390 can still reset the update components to mitigate the issue and have the new SSU deployed.

“To mitigate this issue on devices that have already installed KB4601390 and are not making progress installing KB4601331, restart your device and then follow only steps 1, 2 and 4a from Reset Windows Update components manually,” the company explains.

“Then restart your device again. KB5001079 should…

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