
ByGregg Keizer
Excerpt:
"We are normally very flexible, and will re-schedule [our advisories' releases] when a vendor shows us that they are committed to fixing the bug," said Pedro Varangot, a researcher in CoreLabs, the R&D arm of Core Security. "We released the advisory because Apple told us that they already have the patch ready for release, twice told us that they would release it, but then didn't meet their own self-imposed deadlines."
Source: Computerworld











