Re: Second critical mremap() bug found in all Linux kernels
Grok Headline matches for Re: Second critical mremap() bug found in all Linux kernels
Second critical mremap() bug found in
all Linux kernels
Second critical mremap() bug found in
all Linux kernels
02/18/2004 12:11 PMPaul Starzetz (Feb 18 2004)
Linux mremap bug correction
Linux mremap bug correction
01/06/2004 01:03 PMPaul Starzetz (Jan 06 2004)
Linux kernel mremap() bug update
Linux kernel mremap() bug update
01/16/2004 10:59 AMPaul Starzetz (Jan 15 2004)
Re: Linux kernel mremap vulnerability
Re: Linux kernel mremap vulnerability
01/05/2004 02:50 PMPaul Starzetz (Jan 05 2004)
Linux kernel mremap vulnerability
Linux kernel mremap vulnerability
01/05/2004 02:50 PMPaul Starzetz (Jan 05 2004)
Critical Exploit Found in AIM
Critical Exploit Found in AIM
08/10/2004 04:58 AMTwo Critical Bugs found in IE
Two Critical Bugs found in IE
06/08/2004 05:14 PM"4 more critical exploits are found in
IE"
"4 more critical exploits are found in
IE"
07/14/2004 03:29 AMAnother critical Windows vulnerability
found
Another critical Windows vulnerability
found
03/21/2003 01:36 PMAnother critical Windows vulnerability found
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site | 3 links
Critical Flaw Found in Windows XP SP2
Critical Flaw Found in Windows XP SP2
08/21/2004 04:31 PMSecurity firm Secunia has detailed a new flaw in Internet Explorer
that affects users running Windows XP Service Pack 2. The
vulnerability involves drag-and-drop, which can be used within a Web
page to place a malicious program in the Windows startup folder.
Secunia has branded the issue "highly critical" and says it
comes from "insufficient validation of drag and drop events
issued from the 'Internet' zone." Users are advised to disable
Active Scripting, or use a Web browser other than Internet Explorer.
The security researcher who discovered the flaw has posted
proof-of-conccept code, which involves dragging an image across a Web
page. But Secunia says it could be simplified to require just one
mouse click. Microsoft, however, brushed off concerns over the
potential issue. "Given the significant amount of user action
required to execute an attack, Microsoft does not consider this to be
a high risk for customers," the company said.

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BetaNewsRead full story...Critical Oracle flaw found
Critical Oracle flaw found
12/11/2003 09:38 AMPersonal Computer World Dec 11 2003 9:10AM ET
Critical Flaws Found In Mozilla Products
Critical Flaws Found In Mozilla Products
09/15/2004 03:45 PMAfter releasing their much awaited
preview release of Firefox 1.0, the Mozilla
Foundation has issued a warning about seven critical security issues
with three of its flagship products.
Any product versions
prior to Mozilla 1.7.3, Firefox
1.0PR and Thunderbird 0.8 are considered vulnerable. Mozilla
recommends that all users upgrade their affected software to prevent
exploitation of their systems.
All current releases of mentioned software are considered
"patched" against these new found vulnerabilities. Users of
affected software should download the most recent version of their
products as soon as possible to ensure their continued safe
functionality.

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Mozilla Foundation

View:
Neowin Forum Discussion

News source:
Internetnews.comRead full story...Critical flaw found in Unreal engine
Critical flaw found in Unreal engine
06/23/2004 12:39 PMglobetechnology.com Jun 23 2004 5:05PM GMT
Critical flaw found in game software
Critical flaw found in game software
06/22/2004 08:37 PMA hole in the "Unreal" game engine could let attackers take over
vulnerable computers.
Critical Security Flaw Found in Unreal
Engine
Critical Security Flaw Found in Unreal
Engine
06/23/2004 04:45 AMHighly critical exploit found in AOL
Instant Messenger
Highly critical exploit found in AOL
Instant Messenger
08/09/2004 01:28 PMRyan McGeehan of
TheBillyGoatCurse.com has reported a vulnerability
in AOL Instant Messenger (AIM), which potentially can be exploited by
malicious people to compromise a user's system.
The vulnerability is caused due to a boundary error within the
handling of "Away" messages and can be exploited to cause a
stack-based buffer overflow by supplying an overly long
"Away" message (about 1024 bytes). A malicious website can
exploit this via the "aim:" URI handler by passing an overly
long argument to the "goaway?message" parameter.
Successful exploitation may allow execution of arbitrary code on a
user's system when e.g. a malicious website is visited with certain
browsers.
The vulnerability has been confirmed in version 5.5.3595. Other
versions may also be affected.
Various other issues were also reported, where a large amount of
resources can be consumed on a user's system.
AOL was contacted but has not responded.

News source:
SecuniaRead full story...Future of 2.4 and 2.6 Kernels
Future of 2.4 and 2.6 Kernels
12/06/2003 03:23 PMBlair16 writes "According to this article on C|Net, not everybody is
chomping at the bit for the new Linux 2.6.0 kernel. Marcelo Tosatti,
the appointed deputy ...
Novell OES: A tale of two kernels
Novell OES: A tale of two kernels
02/01/2005 08:19 PMI got to sit down last week with Charlie Ungashick, Novell's director
of product management and marketing, Linux servers and desktops.
(Charlie hands out two business cards: one for his title, one for
everything else!) We talked about - what else - Novell's upcoming Open
Enterprise Server.
Linux Goes Mainstream, But Not
Mission-Critical
Linux Goes Mainstream, But Not
Mission-Critical
03/31/2005 09:04 AMExtreme Tech Mar 31 2005 1:16PM GMT
Linux goes mission-critical for Danish
government
Linux goes mission-critical for Danish
government
09/23/2004 11:51 PMNew Linux Security Hole Found
New Linux Security Hole Found
06/14/2004 07:31 PMA young programmer found a new way to crash most Linux 2.4 or 2.6
distributions running on an x86 architecture, but a fix is being
distributed.
Fault found at Linux core
Fault found at Linux core
12/05/2003 09:01 AMPersonal Computer World Dec 5 2003 8:41AM ET
New flaw found in Linux kernel
New flaw found in Linux kernel
06/15/2004 09:05 PMSerious Linux Security Flaw Found
Serious Linux Security Flaw Found
12/02/2003 02:35 PMThe bug affects versions of the Linux kernel prior to 2.4.23, and was
the method used during a recent attack on Debian's servers, according
to the advisory. In that attack four Linux servers that hosted
Debian's bug tracking system, mailing lists, and various Web pages
were compromised.
Security hole found in Linux
Security hole found in Linux
03/19/2003 10:26 PMAnother security hole found in Linux
kernel
Another security hole found in Linux
kernel
02/19/2004 11:38 AMNew Linux Security Hole Found (Ziff
Davis)
New Linux Security Hole Found (Ziff
Davis)
06/14/2004 07:35 PMZiff Davis - A young programmer found a new way to crash most Linux
2.4 or 2.6 distributions running on an x86 architecture, but a fix is
being distributed.
Nasty Linux kernel crash exploit found
Nasty Linux kernel crash exploit found
06/14/2004 10:48 PMVersions 2.4.x and 2.6.x of the Linux kernel running on x86 systems
are vulnerable to a simple, yet nasty bit of C code that will hard
lock the kernel. The kicker is that anyone with shell access can
execute the code and bring down the system.
Flaw found in Unix/Linux admin tool
Flaw found in Unix/Linux admin tool
09/20/2004 09:17 PMComputer Weekly Sep 21 2004 1:19AM GMT
Critical Path in critical condition
Critical Path in critical condition
12/25/2003 09:17 AMCNET Dec 25 2003 9:16AM ET
Keeping Found Things Found: Web Tools
Don't Always Mesh With How People Work
Keeping Found Things Found: Web Tools
Don't Always Mesh With How People Work
12/18/2003 06:55 AMKe
eping Found Things Found: Web Tools Don't Always Mesh With
How People Workhttp://www.nsf
.gov/pubsys/ods/getpub.cfm?pr03146Of all the personal
computers to be unwrapped during the holiday season, more than 80
percent will be used to go online and search the Web's more than 92
million gigabytes of data (comparable to a 2 billion-volume
encyclopedia). Getting online is the easy part, finding a useful Web
page is a bit harder—keeping track of a useful Web page is another
issue altogether.
People have devised many tricks—such as
sending e-mails to themselves or jotting on sticky notes—for keeping
track of Web pages, but William Jones and Harry Bruce at the
University of Washington's Information School and Susan Dumais of
Microsoft Research have found that often people don't use any of them
when it comes time to revisit a Web page. Instead, they rely on their
ability to find the Web page all over again.
Keeping Found Things Found on the Web
Keeping Found Things Found on the Web
01/28/2004 08:56 AMKeeping Found Things Found on the Web - A Research Project of
the Information School at the University of Washingtonhttp://kftf.isc
hool.washington.edu/projKFTF.asphttp://kftf
.ischool.washington.edu/publications.aspThe goal of
this study is to understand better the ways in which people manage
information for subsequent re-access and re-use. The study focuses on
the management of information found on the Word Wide Web. Follow-on
studies will look at similar problems and practices of personal
information management for other information types including email and
personal files (electronic and paper-based). The classic problem of
information retrieval, simply put, is to help people find the
relatively small number of things they are looking for (books,
articles, web pages, CDs, etc.) from a very large set of
possibilities. This classic problem has been studied in many
variations and has been addressed through a rich diversity of
information retrieval tools and techniques.
A follow-on
problem also exists which has received relatively less study: Once
found, how are things organized for re-access and re-use later on?
What can be done to avoid the need to repeat the entire search
process? We refer to this as the problem of Keeping Found Things
Found. The current study addresses this problem in the context of
World Wide Web use. The study focuses on use of the Web by managers,
researchers, librarians and other information specialists. But it is
expected that the results of the study will be relevant to most users
of the Web.
"critical pick-up"
"critical pick-up"
06/02/2004 11:21 PMCritical credo
Critical credo
12/19/2004 03:23 PMI've been enjoying reading
music critic Alex Ross's
blog over at "The Rest is Noise" for some time now.
This
thoughtful comment on the role of the critic caught my eye -- it
pretty well sums up what I aspired to in the many years I devoted to
writing about theater and movies:
"As a critic, I'm obliged to describe musical reality precisely as
I hear it; I can't sway in the breeze of intermission chatter. All the
same, I want to write a review that will be of use even to a listener
who had an entirely different experience. This entails writing with a
certain humble awareness that my experience is not universal, that my
account will never be carved in granite. Criticism is at its best
where confidence meets generosity. It's a tricky business: the slide
into fake omniscience is deliciously quick. But I'm working on it."
MS patch day: nothing critical
MS patch day: nothing critical
05/12/2004 07:09 AMSolitary fix. Stay calm
Funny and critical.
Funny and critical.
07/19/2004 09:55 AM
Joel gets read a lot by us techies. In part because he's insightful
and writes well, in part due to his particular pedigree, and in part
because he delights in tweaking us in our soft, contentious places.
In the set of blogs that I self-label as "experience talking to us",
I've been reading Joel and have now included the excellent blog Rands
In Repose. (Which, I think Ev has ...
Critical Understanding
Critical Understanding
09/09/2004 10:27 PMAn observation about critiquing work, if you'll
indulge me...
Mission-critical
Mission-critical
05/21/2004 11:34 PMShark Tank: Programmer takes over the critical code for transmitting
settlements on a major e-commerce network, and he keeps noticing one
function in the link file output that doesn't seem to be called
anywhere. ...
IT Doesn't Just Matter, It's Critical
IT Doesn't Just Matter, It's Critical
05/07/2004 04:14 PMFollowing on the post we had yesterday about why Nicholas Carr is
barking
up the wrong tree with his thesis that IT doesn't matter, here's
an article from Don Tapscott in CIO magazine
taking apart
Carr's ideas in detail. It's really an update to a previous talk
Tapscott gave criticizing Carr's ideas, but it's well worth the read.
He makes the argument that companies that buy into Carr's beliefs are
effectively going to commit suicide, and supports my belief in
"fleeting competitive advantages" rather than sustainable ones by
saying: "The speed of the competition is accelerating and competitors
are trying to catch up. This is the new normal. Companies need to be
more agile. Get used to it!"
Grok Description matches for Re: Second critical mremap() bug found in all Linux kernels
GrokA matches for Re: Second critical mremap() bug found in all Linux kernels
Re: Second critical mremap() bug found in all Linux kernels