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SolarWinds Platform was susceptible to the Deserialization of Untrusted Data. This vulnerability allows a remote adversary with Orion admin-level account access to SolarWinds Web Console to execute arbitrary commands.
Reactor Netty HTTP Server, in versions 1.0.11 - 1.0.23, may log request headers in some cases of invalid HTTP requests. The logged headers may reveal valid access tokens to those with access to server logs. This may affect only invalid HTTP requests where logging at WARN level is enabled.
This Metasploit module exploits an unauthenticated remote code execution vulnerability in Spring Cloud Gateway versions 3.0.0 through 3.0.6 and 3.1.0. The vulnerability can be exploited when the Gateway Actuator endpoint is enabled, exposed and unsecured. An unauthenticated attacker can use SpEL expressions to execute code and take control of the victim machine.
At Next '22, Google Cloud announces updates to its trusted cloud ecosystem with new Sovereign Solutions initiative and partnerships spanning critical areas of cybersecurity.
By Jon Munshaw. Welcome to this week’s edition of the Threat Source newsletter. October is National Cybersecurity Awareness Month. Which, if you’ve been on social media at all the past 13 days or read any cybersecurity news website, you surely know already. As it does every year, I saw Cybersecurity Awareness Month kick off with a lot of snark and memes of people joking about what it even means to be “aware” of cybersecurity and why we even have this month at all. And I get why it’s easy to poke fun at, it is at its core a marketing-driven campaign, and hardcore security experts and researchers have notoriously pushed back against this being a marketing-driven field. I’m not saying there should be Cybersecurity Awareness Month mascots brought to life on the floor of Black Hat, but it is probably time to pump the brakes on the skepticism and snark. After all, this week should be about broadening the security community, not trying to exclude others from it. I came to Talos ...
Categories: Exploits and vulnerabilities Categories: News Tags: Microsoft Tags: Apple Tags: Google Tags: Android Tags: Samsung Tags: Xiaomi Tags: Adobe Tags: SAP Tags: VMWare Tags: Fortinet Tags: CVE-2022-41033 Tags: CVE-2022-41040 Tags: zero-day No fix for ProxyNotShell (Read more...) The post Update now! October patch Tuesday fixes actively used zero-day...but not the one you expected appeared first on Malwarebytes Labs.
Red Hat Security Advisory 2022-6890-01 - Red Hat OpenShift Virtualization release 4.8.7 is now available with updates to packages and images that fix several bugs and add enhancements.
Microsoft's Patch Tuesday update for the month of October has addressed a total of 85 security vulnerabilities, including fixes for an actively exploited zero-day flaw in the wild. Of the 85 bugs, 15 are rated Critical, 69 are rated Important, and one is rated Moderate in severity. The update, however, does not include mitigations for the actively exploited ProxyNotShell flaws in Exchange Server
VMware Aria Operations contains an arbitrary file read vulnerability. A malicious actor with administrative privileges may be able to read arbitrary files containing sensitive data.
Red Hat OpenShift Virtualization release 4.8.7 is now available with updates to packages and images that fix several bugs and add enhancements. Red Hat Product Security has rated this update as having a security impact of Important. A Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) base score, which gives a detailed severity rating, is available for each vulnerability from the CVE link(s) in the References section.This content is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). If you distribute this content, or a modified version of it, you must provide attribution to Red Hat Inc. and provide a link to the original. Related CVEs: * CVE-2022-1798: kubeVirt: Arbitrary file read on the host from KubeVirt VMs