Mozilla has fixed 20 security holes with the release of Firefox ESR 17.0.2, Thunderbird 17.0.2 and Thunderbird ESR 17.0.2; 12 of these vulnerabilities have been rated critical by the organisation, the rest are classified as having high impact. . Firefox 18 fixes an additional moderate security issue with touch events that caused a page in an iframe to see touch events occurring within other iframes. The W3C Touch events technology was introduced with Firefox 18 and the issue therefore does not affect older versions of the browser or Thunderbird. The link for this article located at H Security is no longer available. . Firefox version 18 along with Thunderbird 17.0.2 tackle significant vulnerabilities and other concerns through newly released software patches.. Firefox Update, Thunderbird Release, Mozilla Security Issues. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Make no mistake about it, Google updates its Chrome browser very rapidly. At the beginning of June, Google released the first stable version of Chrome 12, fixing at least 15 different security issues and adding new features. Chrome 12 itself is the fourth major browser release from Google so far in 2011. Now Google is updating Chrome . A new version of Chrome 12 is now out for Windows, Linux and Mac, fixing at least seven security flaws, six of which are identified by Google as being high-impact. Chrome Stable 12.0.742.112 is the first security update to Chrome 12 since its' initial release earlier this month. As part of Google's Chromium Security Reward program, Google is paying out $6,000 in awards to security researchers for flaws reported and now fixed in Chrome 12.0.742.112. The link for this article located at Datamation is no longer available. . Latest Chrome 12 patch addresses over seven major vulnerabilities affecting users on Windows, Linux, and Mac platforms. Enhance your security today!. Chrome Security, Software Update, Browser Issues, Chrome Fixes. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Gentoo has fixed a vulnerability in the 2.6 Linux kernel that could be exploited for a remote denial-of-service attack. The company calls this a "high-impact" flaw and recommends users update to newer versions of the kernel. . . .. Gentoo has fixed a vulnerability in the 2.6 Linux kernel that could be exploited for a remote denial-of-service attack. The company calls this a "high-impact" flaw and recommends users update to newer versions of the kernel. The advisory said the security hole can be exploited by a malformed TCP packet with a header length longer than 127 bytes. "By sending one malformed packet, the kernel could get stuck in a loop, consuming all of the CPU resources and rendering the machine useless, causing a denial of service," the advisory said. "This vulnerability requires no local access." Asked if an exploit of the flaw would put data at risk, Gentoo Linux X86 Core and Kernel Team member Tim Yamin said in an e-mail, "No data would be lost as such. But if fresh data is in the kernel's buffers and not yet written to disk[s] it may be lost if the kernel does not come out of the infinite loop." The link for this article located at techtarget.com is no longer available. . Gentoo addresses a significant vulnerability in the 2.6 version of the Linux kernel, necessitating immediate user action for updates.. Gentoo Security, Kernel Update, Denial of Service Fix, Linux Kernel Advisory. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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