Forget zero-days. Java attacks suceed because users are running out-of-date versions of the Java plug-in in their browser. Nearly 75 percent of end users are running a version of Java in their browser ...
Java is under attack again. A zero-day vulnerability in in the wild. The current attacks seem to be targeted, but security experts warn that more widespread attacks could be imminent. Next to Adobe ...
With the recent zero-day exploit for Java, we're beating the "update Java now" drum and playing the "disable Java altogether" fife in the SecurityWatch parade. If that wasn't enough, recent news that ...
Facebook was hacked last week in a zero-day Java attack that struck the laptops of several of its engineers, not long after the Twitter micro social networking website was hit in a similar attack.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security urged computer users to disable Oracle Corp's Java software, amplifying security experts' prior warnings to hundreds of millions of consumers and businesses ...
A new vulnerability discovered in Java 7 has been commoditised and websites exploiting it are already being discovered. The Blackhole exploit kit now targets a newly-discovered unpatched Java 7 ...