A warning about the security flaw identified Monday in the zlib compression/decompression library affecting Linux systems (see story) has been broadened to include Windows and any other other operating systems that use the zlib code. In an update about the flaw on their Web site, the authors of the zlib library said they have learned that the code is used in far more programs than they originally believed.. . .. A warning about the security flaw identified Monday in the zlib compression/decompression library affecting Linux systems (see story) has been broadened to include Windows and any other other operating systems that use the zlib code. In an update about the flaw on their Web site, the authors of the zlib library said they have learned that the code is used in far more programs than they originally believed. "The use of zlib has apparently reached pandemic proportions," according to the statement from co-authors Mark Adler and Jean-loup Gailly. "Before the research in February and March of 2002 on this vulnerability, even the authors of zlib had no clue how widespread the use of zlib has become." The link for this article located at ComputerWorld is no longer available. . A warning about the security flaw identified Monday in the zlib compression/decompression library af. warning, about, security, identified, monday, compression/decompression, library. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A security flaw in open-source software used by Linux and Unix systems for compression may affect some Microsoft products that also use the code. As reported earlier this week by CNET News.com, a flaw in the zlib software-compression library could . . . . A security flaw in open-source software used by Linux and Unix systems for compression may affect some Microsoft products that also use the code. As reported earlier this week by CNET News.com, a flaw in the zlib software-compression library could leave much of the systems based on the open-source operating system Linux open to attack. On Thursday, researchers reported that at least nine of Microsoft's major applications--including Microsoft Office, Internet Explorer, DirectX, Messenger and Front Page--appear to incorporate borrowed code from the compression library and could be vulnerable to a similar attack. Microsoft representatives said that the software giant's security response team is investigating the zlib flaw and that some Microsoft applications use code from that compression library. However, the team hasn't yet determined which applications use the library and whether those applications are vulnerable. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . A significant vulnerability within zlib may jeopardize Microsoft applications that rely on Linux-oriented open-source compression libraries.. Zlib Flaw, Open Source Software, Microsoft Security Risk. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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