(Reuters) - Computer users are being advised by security experts to disable Oracle Corp's widely used Java software after a security flaw was discovered in the past day that they say hackers are ...
The alert comes just after a possible nation state entity attempted to hijack an open-source Linux tool last month. Open Source Cyber Threats Prominent open source software groups are warning that a ...
Internet users should consider disabling Java in their browsers because of an exploit that can allow remote attackers to execute code on a vulnerable system, the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team ...
Security experts have identified a serious security flaw in Java that allows hackers to execute almost any type of malicious activity on affected computers, whether Windows, OSX or Linux. Worse, this ...
Millions of computer users who run the most recent versions of Oracle's Java software should disable it owing to security flaws, says the... Millions of computer users who run the most recent versions ...
I think this is the first time I've been glad ADP's Enterprise eTime doesn't support the latest version of Java. We've been on 1.6 since update 17. I just recently started rolling out update 33 with ...
Java is under attack again. A zero-day vulnerability in Java is being actively exploited in the wild. The current attacks seem to be targeted, but security experts warn that more widespread attacks ...
At my job we use quite a few programs that rely on Microsoft Java to run and we have an ongoing problem in which Sun Java is installed on the machine and the programs stop running. Up to now the fix ...
Remember that big zero-day Java vulnerability the Department of Homeland Security was all worried about? Well, Oracle fixed it. Oh wait, no. That latest Java fix ...
I’m sick of Java, as you probably are too. That said, there have been a number of changes to Java lately that may have flown under the radar. So, here is what you need to know about where things stand ...