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The U.S. ‘No Fly List’ Found On the Open Internet

By Habiba Rashid The Ohio-based airline, CommuteAir, responsible for the incident confirmed the legitimacy of the data to the media. This is a post from HackRead.com Read the original post: The U.S. ‘No Fly List’ Found On the Open Internet

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RHSA-2023:0194: Red Hat Security Advisory: java-17-openjdk security and bug fix update

An update for java-17-openjdk is now available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9. Red Hat Product Security has rated this update as having a security impact of Moderate. A Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) base score, which gives a detailed severity rating, is available for each vulnerability from the CVE link(s) in the References section.This content is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). If you distribute this content, or a modified version of it, you must provide attribution to Red Hat Inc. and provide a link to the original. Related CVEs: * CVE-2023-21835: OpenJDK: handshake DoS attack against DTLS connections (JSSE, 8287411) * CVE-2023-21843: OpenJDK: soundbank URL remote loading (Sound, 8293742)

Threat Actors Turn to Sliver as Open Source Alternative to Popular C2 Frameworks

The legitimate command-and-control (C2) framework known as Sliver is gaining more traction from threat actors as it emerges as an open source alternative to Cobalt Strike and Metasploit. The findings come from Cybereason, which detailed its inner workings in an exhaustive analysis last week. Sliver, developed by cybersecurity company BishopFox, is a Golang-based cross-platform post-exploitation

CVE-2023-24069: CVE-2023-24068 && CVE-2023-24069: Abusing Signal Desktop Client for fun and for Espionage

Signal Desktop before 6.2.0 on Windows, Linux, and macOS allows an attacker to obtain potentially sensitive attachments sent in messages from the attachments.noindex directory. Cached attachments are not effectively cleared. In some cases, even after a self-initiated file deletion, an attacker can still recover the file if it was previously replied to in a conversation. (Local filesystem access is needed by the attacker.)

Microsoft to end direct sale of Windows 10 licenses at the end of January

Categories: News Tags: windows 10 Tags: windows 11 Tags: microsoft Tags: license Tags: sale Tags: third party Tags: desktop Tags: upgrade Tags: hardware We take a look at reports that Microsoft will shortly be ending the direct sale of Windows 10 licenses. (Read more...) The post Microsoft to end direct sale of Windows 10 licenses at the end of January appeared first on Malwarebytes Labs.

A week in security (January 16—22)

Categories: News Tags: Google Tags: Rust Tags: Chromium Tags: Mailchimp Tags: SweepWizard Tags: bossware Tags: TikTok Tags: surveillance firm Tags: Voyager Labs Tags: TracketPacer Tags: Facebook Tags: Instagram Tags: Vice Society Tags: Liquor Control Board of Ontario Tags: Zoho ManageEngine Tags: GitHub Tags: LastPass Tags: Git flaw Tags: ransomware Tags: credit card fraud The most interesting security related news from the week of January 16-22. (Read more...) The post A week in security (January 16—22) appeared first on Malwarebytes Labs.

Backdoor into FortiOS: Chinese Threat Actors Utilize 0-Day

By Deeba Ahmed Chinese hackers are exploiting a previously patched vulnerability found in Fortinet FortiOS SSL-VPN by using new malware called BOLDMOVE. This is a post from HackRead.com Read the original post: Backdoor into FortiOS: Chinese Threat Actors Utilize 0-Day

CVE-2023-22617: Changelogs for 4.8.X — PowerDNS Recursor documentation

A remote attacker might be able to cause infinite recursion in PowerDNS Recursor 4.8.0 via a DNS query that retrieves DS records for a misconfigured domain, because QName minimization is used in QM fallback mode. This is fixed in 4.8.1.

CVE-2023-24040: vulns/HNS-2022-01-dtprintinfo.txt at main · hnsecurity/vulns

** UNSUPPORTED WHEN ASSIGNED ** dtprintinfo in Common Desktop Environment 1.6 has a bug in the parser of lpstat (an invoked external command) during listing of the names of available printers. This allows low-privileged local users to inject arbitrary printer names via the $HOME/.printers file. This injection allows those users to manipulate the control flow and disclose memory contents on Solaris 10 systems. NOTE: This vulnerability only affects products that are no longer supported by the maintainer.