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Weekly Update 111

Troy Hunt

New data breaches, dramas with account recovery, some great ICO password guidance, reflections on conferences past and the latest updates to Scott Helme's and my "Why No HTTPS?" This is on top of one of my screens refusing to go beyond 480p today and a week filled with various other frustrating tech support issues.

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Update now! Google Chrome's first weekly update has arrived

Malwarebytes

Google has published details about the first weekly update for the Chrome browser. Recently Google announced that it would start shipping weekly security updates for the Stable channel (the version most of us use). The latest update has fixes for five vulnerabilities. 111 at your earliest convenience.

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Brazil expert discovers Oracle flaw that allows massive DDoS attacks

Security Affairs

Oracle has just released a security update to prevent 2.3 It runs on port 111 and responds with universal addresses of the server programs so that client programs can request data through RPCs (remote procedure calls). Since its launch, RPCBIND has been receiving updates that cover several failures, including security.

DDOS 98
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Security Affairs newsletter Round 264

Security Affairs

A new round of the weekly SecurityAffairs newsletter arrived! Update it now! Every week the best security articles from Security Affairs free for you in your email box. Copyright (C) 2014-2015 Media.net Advertising FZ-LLC All Rights Reserved -->. Copyright (C) 2014 Media.net Advertising FZ-LLC All Rights Reserved -->.

Malware 52
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Lessons from the cyber front line

IT Security Guru

In February 2020, the code known as Sunburst was let loose and the following month, SolarWinds unknowingly sent out Orion software updates, which included the Sunburst malware. This massive supply-chain attack was installed by more than 18,000 organisations, enabling the attackers to access SolarWinds’ customers’ IT systems.

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Why ForAllSecure Is On MIT Technology Review's 2017 List Of Smartest Companies

ForAllSecure

The application attack surface is growing by 111 billion new lines of software code every year, with newly reported zero-day exploits rising from one-per-week in 2015 to one-per-day by 2021, according to the Application Security Report from Cybersecurity Ventures.

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Why ForAllSecure Is On MIT Technology Review's 2017 List Of Smartest Companies

ForAllSecure

The application attack surface is growing by 111 billion new lines of software code every year, with newly reported zero-day exploits rising from one-per-week in 2015 to one-per-day by 2021, according to the Application Security Report from Cybersecurity Ventures.