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Today we are announcing the availability of the Microsoft Office Isolated Conversion Environment (MOICE) feature and more widely notifying customers of the File Block functionality for Microsoft Office 2003 and the 2007 Microsoft Office system. Both features are designed to make it easier for customers to protect themselves from Office files that may contain malicious software, such as unsolicited Office files received from unknown or known sources. MOICE makes it easier by providing new security mitigation technologies designed to convert specific Microsoft Office files types, while File Block provides a mechanism that can control and block the opening of specific Microsoft Office file types.
The Microsoft Office Isolated Conversion Environment (MOICE) uses the 2007 Microsoft Office system converters to convert Office 2003 binary documents to the newer Office open XML format. The Conversion process helps protect customers by converting the Office 2003 binary file format to the Office open XML format in an isolated environment. In summary, MOICE provides a mechanism for customers to pre-process potentially unsafe Office 2003 binary documents, by virtue of the conversions process it provides customers with a greater degree of certainty that the document can be considered safe.
We encourage Microsoft Office customers to review the related Knowledge base article and consider whether MOICE can help protect users in your IT environment. For more information about this release, see Microsoft Knowledge Base Article 935865.
The File Block Functionality for Microsoft Office 2003 and the 2007 Microsoft Office system allows administrators to restrict via registry and Group Policy specific Office file types that can or cannot be opened when using Microsoft Word, PowerPoint, and Excel. Blocking specific Office file types allows administrators to temporarily deny users the ability to open certain files, such as when a threat of attack from a given Office file type exists.
We encourage Microsoft Office customers to review the related Knowledge base article and consider whether File Block can help protect users in your IT environment. For more information about this release, see Microsoft Knowledge Base Article 922849, Microsoft Knowledge Base Article 922848 and Microsoft Knowledge Base Article 922847.
When MOICE and File Block are used together they are an effective mitigation strategy for customers when the threat of attack using certain Office types exists. This enables customers to continue using Microsoft Office with a high degree of assurance that the files being opened are considered safe and will not infect users with malicious software.
Microsoft Knowledge Base Article (MOICE)
935865
Microsoft Knowledge Base Article (File Block)
922849
922848
922847
This is a good idea and should be implemented, but what about us poor people that are stuck on office 2000!
Is this Microsofts way of forcing organisations into the expensive upgrade cycle?
Upgrade now or be open to attack?[N]
deepcoveruk, have you looked at the MS Support Lifecycle site in recently?
http://support.microsoft.com/gp/LifeSupSps#Office
http://support.microsoft.com/gp/lifeOffice
So to sum up those links: Office 2000 had its last service pack October 21st, 2002, exited mainstream support June 30th, 2004, and will be under extended support (ie. updates only for security vulnerabilities) through July 14th, 2009.
To say "Upgrade now or be open to attack" is a bit harsh, those upgrade plans should have been in progress before (or right after) it entered extended support. So "now" should have been at the end of June 2004 (nearly 3 years ago). The threat landscape has changed dramatically since 2004 and even more since O2K was first released.