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by Someone1234
172 days ago
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Low. While the NSA would, absolutely, use it to elevate existing internal access - it is such low-hanging fruit that they have enough alternative tools in their arsenal that it isn't a particularly big loss. Most of their competent adversaries disabled it years ago (as has been best-practice since 2010~). More likely, it is Microsoft's obsession with backwards compatibility. Which while a great philosophy in general has given them a black eye several times before vis-a-vis security posture. |
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A weakness anyone can exploit in software Americans use is not a good thing for the NSA. If they were to introduce weaknesses, they want to make sure only they can exploit them. For instance in the famous dual_ec_drbg case where the NSA is suspected to have introduced a backdoor, the exploit depends on a secret key. This is not the case here.
On the other hand if Snowden has shown us anything, it is that the NSA is more stupid than it looks.