Funny enough, no they don’t all have enterprise level support from Microsoft. Hell the ones that do don’t use it, at the scale you are talking about you likely have the same or better support internally.
I don’t understand why you think that you can even get Microsoft support for 7 at this point?
Banks and other institutions that use Windows XP often do so under specialized agreements with Microsoft, called Custom Support Agreements (CSAs) or Custom Extended Support Agreements (CESAs). These agreements allow organizations to continue receiving critical security updates for their legacy systems even after official support has ended. Here’s how these agreements work:
Custom Support Agreements (CSAs)
After Windows XP’s official support ended in April 2014, Microsoft offered CSAs to organizations that could not immediately migrate to newer operating systems due to compatibility, cost, or operational constraints.
Under a CSA, Microsoft continues to provide critical security updates specifically tailored to the organization’s systems.
These agreements are typically very expensive and are meant as a temporary measure while the organization transitions to a supported platform.
Why Banks Use CSAs
Legacy Systems: Many ATMs and banking software were originally built to run on Windows XP, and updating to newer systems can be complex and costly due to hardware and software dependencies.
Security Needs: Despite using outdated systems, banks must maintain a high level of security. The CSA ensures critical vulnerabilities are patched.
Regulatory Compliance: Financial institutions are heavily regulated and need to meet strict security standards. Extended support agreements help them avoid compliance violations.
Custom Patching and Support
Microsoft provides patches only for the most critical vulnerabilities that could severely impact the organization.
These updates are not made available to the general public, ensuring that only organizations with a CSA receive them.
Cost
The cost of a CSA is high and increases annually to encourage organizations to migrate to supported platforms.
Some estimates suggest costs in the range of $1,000 to $5,000 per device per year, depending on the scale and specifics of the agreement.
Alternatives Banks Might Use
Some banks have begun moving away from Windows XP entirely, often transitioning to supported operating systems like Windows 10 or Windows Embedded systems.
They may also use virtualized environments to maintain compatibility with older applications without relying on outdated OS versions directly.
These agreements allow banks and other critical industries to maintain operations securely while planning their eventual migration to modern systems. However, this is a stopgap solution and not a permanent fix, as the long-term risks and costs of relying on unsupported software grow over time.
Yes, it says what I have been saying all along. Banks and financial institutions have special service contracts with Microsoft.
You, do not. Don’t run old ass windows versions that are not actively supported. This is not a controversial statement.
Your attempt to compare your usage vs the usage of a financial institution is not only a false equivocation, it’s particularly stupid in light of the fact specialized contracts exist.
Not sure what you mean, but I’ve never seen a banking or government machine that was raw-dogging the internet.
They’re behind a firewall, a web filter, a content deconstructor, a hyperlink sandbox and an endpoint protection where processes need to be white-listed to run.
In such a setting, it may be safe to still run Windows 7 for some tasks, but it won’t be for browsing and email.
Not sure how its done in your country, but there are very much windows 7 machines here “raw dogging” the internet. Its more about risk management then anything.
I mean we are in a world where right now the security solutions are worse then the risk of attack. Right now attacks are done mainly with social engineering and the new systems make bonzi buddy look tame.
There is little point punishing my self by changing my windows 7 machine that I like just so that I can change out old vulnerabilities with new ones. I swear software fear mongering runs half the industry right now on nothing other then inertia.
I wouldn’t type on that without rubber gloves, if I were you.
And yet it is just fine for your banking institutions, and a surprising amount of government machines.
I think it is just lovely on my media PC in my living room.
That’s because those banking institutions have enterprise level support that they pay for yearly from Microsoft.
You do not.
Funny enough, no they don’t all have enterprise level support from Microsoft. Hell the ones that do don’t use it, at the scale you are talking about you likely have the same or better support internally.
I don’t understand why you think that you can even get Microsoft support for 7 at this point?
Businesses, especially banks, have different rules. Banks are still getting security updates for their systems running Windows XP (generally ATMs).
A bank isn’t some run of the mill business and banks always have special relationships with Microsoft.
I was the guy fixing those, no they don’t.
Yes, they do. Ffs, your claims are ridiculous.
Read and learn something for a change:
Banks and other institutions that use Windows XP often do so under specialized agreements with Microsoft, called Custom Support Agreements (CSAs) or Custom Extended Support Agreements (CESAs). These agreements allow organizations to continue receiving critical security updates for their legacy systems even after official support has ended. Here’s how these agreements work:
After Windows XP’s official support ended in April 2014, Microsoft offered CSAs to organizations that could not immediately migrate to newer operating systems due to compatibility, cost, or operational constraints.
Under a CSA, Microsoft continues to provide critical security updates specifically tailored to the organization’s systems.
These agreements are typically very expensive and are meant as a temporary measure while the organization transitions to a supported platform.
Legacy Systems: Many ATMs and banking software were originally built to run on Windows XP, and updating to newer systems can be complex and costly due to hardware and software dependencies.
Security Needs: Despite using outdated systems, banks must maintain a high level of security. The CSA ensures critical vulnerabilities are patched.
Regulatory Compliance: Financial institutions are heavily regulated and need to meet strict security standards. Extended support agreements help them avoid compliance violations.
Microsoft provides patches only for the most critical vulnerabilities that could severely impact the organization.
These updates are not made available to the general public, ensuring that only organizations with a CSA receive them.
The cost of a CSA is high and increases annually to encourage organizations to migrate to supported platforms.
Some estimates suggest costs in the range of $1,000 to $5,000 per device per year, depending on the scale and specifics of the agreement.
Some banks have begun moving away from Windows XP entirely, often transitioning to supported operating systems like Windows 10 or Windows Embedded systems.
They may also use virtualized environments to maintain compatibility with older applications without relying on outdated OS versions directly.
These agreements allow banks and other critical industries to maintain operations securely while planning their eventual migration to modern systems. However, this is a stopgap solution and not a permanent fix, as the long-term risks and costs of relying on unsupported software grow over time.
You use chat GPT for this one? Because this does not say what you think it does.
Yes, it says what I have been saying all along. Banks and financial institutions have special service contracts with Microsoft.
You, do not. Don’t run old ass windows versions that are not actively supported. This is not a controversial statement.
Your attempt to compare your usage vs the usage of a financial institution is not only a false equivocation, it’s particularly stupid in light of the fact specialized contracts exist.
Or they’re firewalled off. Or not on the network at all.
It is just lovely on any PC that doesn’t connect to the internet.
Oh, you sweet summer child.
Not sure what you mean, but I’ve never seen a banking or government machine that was raw-dogging the internet.
They’re behind a firewall, a web filter, a content deconstructor, a hyperlink sandbox and an endpoint protection where processes need to be white-listed to run.
In such a setting, it may be safe to still run Windows 7 for some tasks, but it won’t be for browsing and email.
Not sure how its done in your country, but there are very much windows 7 machines here “raw dogging” the internet. Its more about risk management then anything.
I mean we are in a world where right now the security solutions are worse then the risk of attack. Right now attacks are done mainly with social engineering and the new systems make bonzi buddy look tame.
There is little point punishing my self by changing my windows 7 machine that I like just so that I can change out old vulnerabilities with new ones. I swear software fear mongering runs half the industry right now on nothing other then inertia.