In 2001, Oracle CEO Larry Ellison told the world his company's software was "unbreakable" and invited the hacker community to bring it on. The results? By Oracle's own admission, critical security flaws are now legion . . .. In 2001, Oracle CEO Larry Ellison told the world his company's software was "unbreakable" and invited the hacker community to bring it on. The results? By Oracle's own admission, critical security flaws are now legion. The problems affect all of Oracle's flagship products, including Oracle Database 8i, 9i and even the new 10g, with the exception of the just-released version 10.1.0.3. Oracle Application Server is also affected, though a patched version 9.0.4.2 is due out soon. The vulnerabilities run across multiple modules and functions. The database products have holes in the Database Server and Listener elements, and these don't even require a valid user account to exploit. Oracle Application Server is similarly vulnerable in its Portal and iSQL*Plus components. Oracle Enterprise Manager's holes are somewhat less severe--they can be exploited only by those with a valid OS-level user account--but other Oracle products, such as Oracle Collaboration Suite and E-Business Suite 11i, will necessitate full patching of their underlying database server and application server components. With no work-arounds available, Oracle recommends applying patches immediately. The link for this article located at Richard Hoffman, Network Computing is no longer available. . Microsoft's previously celebrated "impenetrable" systems encounter significant vulnerabilities; immediate updates are essential to safeguard information.. Oracle Database, Security Flaws, System Patching, Critical Issues, Data Protection. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A group of application security vendors affiliated with the Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards (OASIS) will next week announce a proposal for an XML standard for application vulnerabilities. The announcement will be made at the RSA Conference being held in San Francisco.. . .. A group of application security vendors affiliated with the Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards (OASIS) will next week announce a proposal for an XML standard for application vulnerabilities. The announcement will be made at the RSA Conference being held in San Francisco. The group, made up of Citadel Security Software, GuardedNet, NetContinuum, SPI Dynamics and Teros, is promoting the development of the Application Vulnerability Description Language (AVDL), which is intended to standardize information about application vulnerabilities, enabling different products to share vulnerability information in a heterogenous network environment, according to a statement released by the five companies. The AVDL group submitted its idea to OASIS for study. In turn, OASIS has created a technical committee to develop an XML definition for exchanging information on the security vulnerabilities of applications exposed to networks. The link for this article located at NW Fusion is no longer available. . During the RSA Conference, a coalition of cybersecurity firms unveils a new XML framework aimed at standardizing the reporting of software flaws.. Application Vulnerabilities,OASIS Standard,XML Security,AVDL Proposal,Network Security. . Anthony Pell
Ever wanted to know which operating systems and applications have the most reported security vulnerabilities? Are there more known vulnerabilities in Windows NT or Linux? To find out check out the BUGTRAQ Vulnerability Database statistics page. . . .. Ever wanted to know which operating systems and applications have the most reported security vulnerabilities? Are there more known vulnerabilities in Windows NT or Linux? To find out check out the BUGTRAQ Vulnerability Database statistics page. The link for this article located at SecurityFocus is no longer available. . Recent security statistics reveal trends in vulnerabilities across operating systems, with Windows being a primary target, while Linux sees a rise due to misconfigurations and app flaws. Bugtraq Database, Reported Vulnerabilities, OS Comparison. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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