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Threat Source newsletter (Sept. 15, 2022) — Why there is no one-stop-shop solution for protecting passwords

By Jon Munshaw.  Welcome to this week’s edition of the Threat Source newsletter.  Public schools in the United States already rely on our teachers for so much — they have to be educators, occasional parental figures, nurses, safety officers, law enforcement and much more. Slowly, they’re having to add “IT admin” to their list of roles.  Educational institutions have increasingly become a target for ransomware attacks, an issue already highlighted this year by a major cyber attack on the combined Los Angeles school district in California that schools are still recovering from.  Teachers there reported that during the week of the attack, they couldn’t enter attendance, lost lesson plans and presentations, and had to scrap homework plans. Technology has become ever-present in classrooms, so any minimal disruption in a school’s network or software can throw pretty much everything off.  The last thing teachers need to worry about now is defending against a well-funded threat act...

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CVE-2022-37207: someEXP_of_jfinal_cms/sql10.md at main · AgainstTheLight/someEXP_of_jfinal_cms

JFinal CMS 5.1.0 is affected by: SQL Injection. These interfaces do not use the same component, nor do they have filters, but each uses its own SQL concatenation method, resulting in SQL injection

Here are the new security and privacy features of iOS 16

Categories: Apple Categories: News iOS 16 has landed and it comes with a lot of features to strengthen a user's account security and privacy. We've taken a look. (Read more...) The post Here are the new security and privacy features of iOS 16 appeared first on Malwarebytes Labs.

CVE-2022-38308: GitHub - WhoisZkuan/TOTOlink-A700RU

TOTOLink A700RU V7.4cu.2313_B20191024 was discovered to contain a command injection vulnerability via the lang parameter in the function cstesystem. This vulnerability allows attackers to execute arbitrary commands via a crafted payload.

Update now! Microsoft patches two zero-days

Categories: News Tags: CVE-2022-37969 Tags: CVE-2022-23960 Tags: CVE-2022-35805 Tags: CVE-2022-34700 Tags: CVE-2022-34718 Tags: CVE-2022-34721 Tags: CVE-2022-34722 Tags: Microsoft Tags: Adobe Tags: Android Tags: Apple Tags: Cisco Tags: Google Tags: Samsung Tags: SAP Tags: VMWare The September 2022 Patch Tuesday updates includes two zero-day vulnerabilities, one of which is known to be used in attacks (Read more...) The post Update now! Microsoft patches two zero-days appeared first on Malwarebytes Labs.

Microsoft's Latest Security Update Fixes 64 New Flaws, Including a Zero-Day

Tech giant Microsoft on Tuesday shipped fixes to quash 64 new security flaws across its software lineup, including one zero-day flaw that has been actively exploited in real-world attacks. Of the 64 bugs, five are rated Critical, 57 are rated Important, one is rated Moderate, and one is rated Low in severity. The patches are in addition to 16 vulnerabilities that Microsoft addressed in its

Wormable Flaw, 0days Lead Sept. 2022 Patch Tuesday

This month's Patch Tuesday offers a little something for everyone, including security updates for a zero-day flaw in Microsoft Windows that is under active attack, and another Windows weakness experts say could be used to power a fast-spreading computer worm. Also, Apple has also quashed a pair of zero-day bugs affecting certain macOS and iOS users, and released iOS 16, which includes a nifty new privacy and security feature called "Lockdown Mode." And Adobe axed 63 vulnerabilities in a range of products.

CVE-2022-35582: WAPPLES Web Application Firewall Multiple Vulnerabilities

Penta Security Systems Inc WAPPLES 4.0.*, 5.0.0.*, 5.0.12.* are vulnerable to Incorrect Access Control. The operating system that WAPPLES runs on has a built-in non-privileged user penta with a predefined password. The password for this user, as well as its existence, is not disclosed in the documentation. Knowing the credentials, attackers can use this feature to gain uncontrolled access to the device and therefore are considered an undocumented possibility for remote control.