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All Most Valued Professionals within the Microsoft platforms community and living within the 27 eligible countries worldwide will now be able to access Windows source code at no cost.
Microsoft is giving its Most Valued Professionals access to its Windows source code—including code for Windows 2000, Windows XP and Windows Server 2003.
Fortunately, there are people around the world who work hard at preserving these older systems and give us a living, working ...
Microsoft on Wednesday announced it was expanding its code-sharing program, called Shared Source, giving hundreds of its Most Valuable Professionals (MVPs) access to all the source code of Windows ...
Microsoft's confirmation Thursday that portions of Windows NT and Windows 2000 code were leaked over the Internet sent shock waves through the channel, raising concern that hackers and competitors ...
Incomplete portions of Windows NT and Windows 2000 source code were "illegally made available on the Internet," Microsoft spokesman Tom Pilla said late yesterday.
Microsoft has confirmed that portions of the operating system source code of Windows were illegally made available on the internet and being downloaded by thousands of users across many peer to peer ...
The Australian government is to gain access to the source code underlying Microsoft's Windows operating system, after signing an agreement with the software heavyweight in Canberra yesterday. The ...
Microsoft's announcement that it will disclose part of the source code of its Windows operating system to competitors has not met with the positive reaction that the software maker may have hoped for.
Microsoft plans to share the source code underlying Windows with several international governments, a move designed to address concerns about the security of the OS.
The source code for Microsoft's long-lived operating system Windows XP has leaked online. A user named 'billgates3' published the code last week as a 42.9 GB torrent file on bulletin board website ...