Minecraft has patched the exploit, but the threat for many others remains. Credit: Georg Wendt/picture alliance via Getty Images It's being called the "worst bug impacting the Internet in the last 5 ...
Security experts around the world raced Friday to patch one of the worst computer vulnerabilities discovered in years, a critical flaw in open-source code widely used across industry and government in ...
It’s been four months since Log4Shell, a critical zero-day vulnerability in the ubiquitous Apache Log4j library, was discovered, and threat analysts warn that the application of the available fixes is ...
Four months after the critical flaw was discovered, attackers have a massive attack surface from which they can exploit the flaw and take over systems, researchers found. Four months after the ...
Not only is the jaw-dropping flaw in the Apache Log4j logging library ubiquitous; Apache’s blanket of a quickly baked patch for Log4Shell also has holes. As if finding one easily exploited and ...
Log4Shell is the name given to a critical zero-day vulnerability that surfaced on Thursday when it was exploited in the wild in remote-code compromises against Minecraft servers. The source of the ...
A number of popular services, including Apple iCloud, Twitter, Cloudflare, Minecraft and Steam, are reportedly vulnerable to a zero-day vulnerability affecting a popular Java logging library.
Late last week, cybersecurity firm LunaSec uncovered a critical vulnerability in the open-source Log4j library that could give hackers the ability to run malicious code on remote servers. Countless ...
An "extremely bad" Log4Shell exploit was spotted giving hackers an easy way to execute code on machines with the vulnerability. With that, security teams and companies both big and small are all ...
Discovered in December 2021, the Log4Shell vulnerability has affected hundreds of millions of digital devices and will likely continue to command the attention of IT security forces for the ...