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Ubuntu Security Notice USN-6819-3

Ubuntu Security Notice 6819-3 - Alon Zahavi discovered that the NVMe-oF/TCP subsystem in the Linux kernel did not properly validate H2C PDU data, leading to a null pointer dereference vulnerability. A remote attacker could use this to cause a denial of service. Chenyuan Yang discovered that the RDS Protocol implementation in the Linux kernel contained an out-of-bounds read vulnerability. An attacker could use this to possibly cause a denial of service.

Packet Storm
#vulnerability#android#mac#ubuntu#linux#dos#intel#perl#samba#rpm#ssl
Ubuntu Security Notice USN-6831-1

Ubuntu Security Notice 6831-1 - It was discovered that the HugeTLB file system component of the Linux Kernel contained a NULL pointer dereference vulnerability. A privileged attacker could possibly use this to to cause a denial of service. Several security issues were discovered in the Linux kernel. An attacker could possibly use these to compromise the system.

Pakistan-linked Malware Campaign Evolves to Target Windows, Android, and macOS

Threat actors with ties to Pakistan have been linked to a long-running malware campaign dubbed Operation Celestial Force since at least 2018. The activity, still ongoing, entails the use of an Android malware called GravityRAT and a Windows-based malware loader codenamed HeavyLift, according to Cisco Talos, which are administered using another standalone tool referred to as GravityAdmin. The

Operation Celestial Force employs mobile and desktop malware to target Indian entities

Cisco Talos is disclosing a new malware campaign called “Operation Celestial Force” running since at least 2018. It is still active today, employing the use of GravityRAT, an Android-based malware, along with a Windows-based malware loader we track as “HeavyLift.”

Pakistani Hacking Team 'Celestial Force' Spies on Indian Gov't, Defense

Against a backdrop of political conflict, a years-long cyber-espionage campaign in South Asia is coming to light.

IPsec performance on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9: A performance analysis of AES-GCM

Testing environmentIn this performance analysis, we investigate various configurations and testing scenarios to showcase IPsec throughput on the latest RHEL 9 platform. Our choice of a modern multicore CPU and the latest stable RHEL aims to represent today's technological capabilities.Hardware configurationDual socket of 28 cores each Intel 4th Generation Xeon Scalable ProcessorHyper-threading enabled (two sockets with 56 logical cores each)Directly connected high-speed 100Gbit Intel E810 network cardsSoftware informationDistribution: RHEL-9.4.0Kernel: 5.14.0-427.13.1.el9_4.x86_64NetworkManage

Rockwell's ICS Directive Comes as Critical Infrastructure Risk Peaks

Critical infrastructure is facing increasingly disruptive threats to physical processes, while thousands of devices are online with weak authentication and riddled with exploitable bugs.

Nvidia Patches High-Severity Flaws in GPU Drivers

Nvidia's latest GPUs are a hot commodity for AI, but security vulnerabilities could expose them to attacks from hackers.

Scores of Biometrics Bugs Emerge, Highlighting Authentication Risks

Face scans stored like passwords inevitably will be compromised, like passwords are. But there's a crucial difference between the two that organizations can rely on when their manufacturers fail.

TellYouThePass Ransomware Group Exploits Critical PHP Flaw

An RCE vulnerability that affects the Web scripting language on Windows systems is easy to exploit and can provide a broad attack surface.