Twenty-one severe vulnerabilities have been found in Chromium, including multiple use after frees and heap buffer overflows, among other security issues. These bugs have received a National Vulnerability Database severity rating of “High” due to their ease of exploitation and their significant threat to impacted systems' confidentiality, integrity, and availability. . These vulnerabilities have enabled remote attackers to exploit heap corruption and perform arbitrary read/write via a crafted HTML page. They also allowed an attacker who convinced a user to install a malicious extension to inject scripts or HTML into a privileged page via a crafted Chrome Extension. Important updates have been released for Chromium that fix these severe issues. We urge all impacted users to apply the updates released by Debian , Fedora and openSUSE now to protect against attacks leading to downtime and compromise. To stay on top of essential updates released by the open-source programs and applications you use, register as a LinuxSecurity user , subscribe to our Linux Advisory Watch newsletter, and customize your advisories for your distro(s). This will enable you to stay up-to-date on the latest, most significant issues impacting the security of your systems. Follow @LS_Advisories on Twitter for real-time updates on advisories for your distro(s) . . Critical weaknesses in Chromium might enable attacks through specially designed HTML files. Users are urged to upgrade promptly to reduce threats.. Chromium Security Update, High Severity Issues, Remote Exploit Risks. . Brittany Day
Eleven severe vulnerabilities have been found in Chromium, including multiple Type Confusion bugs in V8, use-after-frees in Cast, Blink Task Scheduling and WebRTC, a heap buffer overflow in Visuals, out-of-bounds read and write in WebGL, out-of-bounds memory access in ANGLE, and insufficient data validation and inappropriate implementation in Extensions. These bugs have received a National Vulnerability Database severity rating of “High” due to their ease of exploitation and the significant threat they pose to impacted systems' confidentiality, integrity, and availability. . These issues have allowed a remote attacker to potentially exploit heap corruption and perform arbitrary read/write via a crafted HTML page. They also enabled an attacker who convinced a user to install a malicious extension to inject scripts or HTML into a privileged page via a crafted Chrome Extension. Important updates have been released for Chromium that fix these dangerous flaws. We urge all impacted users to apply the updates issued by Debian , Fedora and openSUSE to protect against potential security threats. To stay on top of essential updates released by the open-source programs and applications you use, register as a LinuxSecurity user , subscribe to our Linux Advisory Watch newsletter, and customize your advisories for your distro(s). This will enable you to stay up-to-date on the latest, most significant issues impacting the security of your systems. Follow @LS_Advisories on Twitter for real-time updates on advisories for your distro(s) . . Critical vulnerabilities in Chromium jeopardize platforms to distant attacks and memory corruption. Ensure updates are applied to safeguard against risks.. Chromium Flaws, High Severity Advisory, Remote Exploits, Security Update. . Brittany Day
About a year after it first appeared as a Windows application, Google's Chrome browser is finally available in beta for Linux. Google had to limit its compatible distro list to a handful of popular Linux versions, but those who can use it will likely enjoy its speed, features and the hundreds of extensions Google has made available.. Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) finally released a beta version of its Chrome Web browser for Linux on Dec. 8, slightly more than one year after releasing its Chrome browser for Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) Windows. The wait was worth it, especially given the more than 300 extensions already available to customize the new browser. Because Linux distributions are numerous, Google ported the Chrome code to a select handful of the most popular distros. Chrome for Linux is so far only available for the Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora and OpenSuse distros. Similar to Google Chrome for Windows and Mac (also just released), Google focused on speed, stability Take the worry out of managing your enterprise applications. Click to learn how. and security in building the Linux version. However, Google also wanted a high-performance browser that integrated well with the Linux ecosystem, according to Brian Rakowski, product manager. The link for this article located at Linux Insider is no longer available. . Mozilla introduced a preliminary edition of its Firefox browser for Windows, improving overall performance and user personalization.. Linux Browsers, Google Chrome, Chrome for Linux. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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