Researchers at a threat and vulnerability management firm have replicated an exploit taking advantage of a fresh zero-day vulnerability in Java. A researcher known as Kafeine was among the first to ...
A new exploit for a previously unknown and unpatched Java vulnerability is being actively used by attackers to infect computers with malware, according to researchers from security firm FireEye. “We ...
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 ...
A new exploit for a recently fixed vulnerability in Java has been added to the Metasploit penetration testing framework, according to vulnerability management firm Rapid7, which owns the open-source ...
Only days after the last security flaw was patched by Oracle, a fresh zero-day vulnerability has been found and put up for sale for $5,000. The latest exploit takes advantage of a security flaw in the ...
A new zero-day exploit in multiple versions of Java puts roughly 1 billion users at risk to attackers and malicious code. The flaw was discovered by researchers at Poland's Security Explorations, a ...
Cybercriminals are using a zero-day Java exploit to infect and take control of victims' computers, a security vendor warned Tuesday. Sophos said the flaw, first reported by security firm FireEye, was ...
Oracle contributes to the problem by not working more closely with the security industry on Java defenses, one security expert said A zero-day Java exploit found for sale in the criminal underground ...
Just in time for the new year, there's a new Java zero-day exploit out in the wild. It's already being used by criminals to attack your Web browser, and the only defense is to disable Java for ...
The sector most heavily impacted by the Spring4Shell Java flaw is technology, according to security firm Check Point. Spring4Shell is a bug worth paying attention to and could be a software supply ...
Online attackers have wasted no time seizing on a critical vulnerability in Oracle's Java software framework that makes it possible to install malware on computers running Windows, Mac OS X, or Linux.