Attackers using two recently-uncovered Java unpatched vulnerabilities, or “zero-days,” have quickly expanded their reach by going mainstream, security experts said today. And on Tuesday, Mozilla, ...
The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2025-61882 (CVSS score: 9.8), concerns an unspecified bug that could allow an ...
The hundreds of government, military and research organizations targeted in a large-scale cyberespionage operation dubbed Red October were not only attacked using malicious Excel and Word documents as ...
Cyber criminals were quick to integrate a newly released exploit for a Java vulnerability patched in June into a tool used to launch mass attacks against users, an independent malware researcher ...
An exploit for a previously unknown and currently unpatched vulnerability in Java is being used by cybercriminals to infect computers with malware, according to security researchers. An independent ...
'These types of vulnerabilities are frequent attack vectors,' CISA says in a post online. A government agency is warning about threat actors exploiting a Java deserialization remote code execution ...
"Please, for the love of your computer, disable Java on your browser." This keeps ignoring the fact that very few Mac and Linux machines in the wild actually have the ...
Java should be considered a top software security threat, even more so than Adobe PDF files, according to Microsoft's announcement issued today. Java should be considered a top software security ...
Below are instructions for unplugging Java from whatever Web browser you may use to surf the Web. These instructions were originally posted as a how-to in response to this piece: Zero-Day Java Exploit ...
So is anyone going to mention what malware was served and how to check to see if you have it? I hit Yahoo on and off and I have Java. I'd love to know if I need to worry and if so, what I need to ...