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Debian Security Advisory 5522-1

Debian Linux Security Advisory 5522-1 - Several security vulnerabilities have been discovered in the Tomcat servlet and JSP engine.

Packet Storm
#vulnerability#web#linux#debian#dos#apache#js#auth
Ubuntu Security Notice USN-6428-1

Ubuntu Security Notice 6428-1 - It was discovered that LibTIFF could be made to read out of bounds when processing certain malformed image files with the tiffcrop utility. If a user were tricked into opening a specially crafted image file, an attacker could possibly use this issue to cause tiffcrop to crash, resulting in a denial of service.

Red Hat Security Advisory 2023-5604-01

Red Hat Security Advisory 2023-5604-01 - The kernel packages contain the Linux kernel, the core of any Linux operating system. Issues addressed include denial of service, out of bounds write, and use-after-free vulnerabilities.

Red Hat Security Advisory 2023-5603-01

Red Hat Security Advisory 2023-5603-01 - The kernel-rt packages provide the Real Time Linux Kernel, which enables fine-tuning for systems with extremely high determinism requirements. Issues addressed include denial of service, out of bounds write, and use-after-free vulnerabilities.

Red Hat Security Advisory 2023-5587-01

Red Hat Security Advisory 2023-5587-01 - Kernel-based Virtual Machine offers a full virtualization solution for Linux on numerous hardware platforms. The virt:rhel module contains packages which provide user-space components used to run virtual machines using KVM. The packages also provide APIs for managing and interacting with the virtualized systems. Issues addressed include buffer overflow, code execution, and denial of service vulnerabilities.

Google, Cloudflare, and AWS Disclose Largest DDoS Attack in History

By Deeba Ahmed Google, Cloudflare, and AWS Disclosed Digital History’s Largest Ever DDoS Attack- Courtesy HTTP/2 Zero-day. This is a post from HackRead.com Read the original post: Google, Cloudflare, and AWS Disclose Largest DDoS Attack in History

Microsoft Releases October 2023 Patches for 103 Flaws, Including 2 Active Exploits

Microsoft has released its Patch Tuesday updates for October 2023, addressing a total of 103 flaws in its software, two of which have come under active exploitation in the wild. Of the 103 flaws, 13 are rated Critical and 90 are rated Important in severity. This is apart from 18 security vulnerabilities addressed in its Chromium-based Edge browser since the second Tuesday of September. The two

CVE-2023-45194: Multiple vulnerabilities in Micro Research MR-GM series

Use of default credentials vulnerability in MR-GM2 firmware Ver. 3.00.03 and earlier, and MR-GM3 (-D/-K/-S/-DK/-DKS/-M/-W) firmware Ver. 1.03.45 and earlier allows a network-adjacent unauthenticated attacker to intercept wireless LAN communication, when the affected product performs the communication without changing the pre-shared key from the factory-default configuration.

Patch Tuesday, October 2023 Edition

Microsoft today issued security updates for more than 100 newly-discovered vulnerabilities in its Windows operating system and related software, including four flaws that are already being exploited. In addition, Apple recently released emergency updates to quash a pair of zero-day bugs in iOS.

GHSA-fr44-546p-7xcp: MsQuic Remote Denial of Service Vulnerability

### Impact The MsQuic server will continue to leak memory until no more is available, resulting in a denial of service. ### Patches The following patch was made: - Fix Memory Leak from Multiple Decodes of TP - https://github.com/microsoft/msquic/commit/d364feeda0dd8b729eca6fef149c1ef98630f0cb ### Workarounds Beyond upgrading to the patched versions, there is no other workaround.