Microsoft Patches a Record 570 Security Flaws

AI found 570 Microsoft holes, and the internet is asking who wrote this mess

TLDR: Microsoft fixed a record 570 security problems, including a few already being abused by attackers, and says AI is helping find more of them. Commenters were not impressed, joking that the real scandal is how software this broken keeps shipping at all.

Microsoft just dropped a monster fix pack: 570 security flaws patched in one go, including three bugs already being used by attackers and nearly 60 rated serious enough to let crooks take over a computer with little help from the victim. The company says the giant number is partly because artificial intelligence is finding more problems faster. The community response? Less “wow, impressive” and more “uh, why were there this many in the first place?”

That mood got spicy fast. One commenter delivered the thread’s instant-classic line, basically saying if only actual human intelligence had stopped these bugs before release. Ouch. Another user wondered how many new bugs these emergency fixes might accidentally create, which is peak weary Windows energy. And when Microsoft pointed to AI as the reason the flaw count exploded, readers didn’t exactly throw a parade — they treated it like a company admitting the smoke alarm works while the kitchen is still on fire.

The funniest side quest was people comparing Microsoft’s numbers to 428 separate Chrome-related flaws also fixed in Edge, leading to a full-on rant about modern software being rushed out like “spraying diarrhea masquerading as code into a keyboard.” Subtle! Meanwhile, another commenter complained that Microsoft still doesn’t make updating all its own products easy in one place, which turned the thread into a mix of rage, exhaustion, and dark humor. In short: the patches are important, but the comments say the real bug is how normal this chaos has become.

Key Points

  • Microsoft’s July 2026 Patch Tuesday fixed at least 570 security vulnerabilities, nearly triple the total from the prior month’s record release.
  • Nearly 60 of the patched vulnerabilities were rated critical, indicating potential for remote takeover of Windows devices with minimal user interaction.
  • Microsoft fixed three zero-day flaws already being exploited in the wild, including elevation of privilege bugs in Active Directory Federation Services and Microsoft SharePoint.
  • The company also addressed CVE-2026-50661, a Windows BitLocker bypass that could expose encrypted data when an attacker has physical access to a device.
  • Microsoft and outside researchers said AI is accelerating both vulnerability discovery and, potentially, exploit development, prompting scrutiny of Microsoft’s exploitability ratings.

Hottest takes

"If only real intelligence found the fucking things instead" — gerdesj
"I wonder how many bugs will be introduced with these fixes..." — freitasm
"spraying diarrhea masquerading as code into a keyboard" — naturalmovement
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