Adobe To Patch Flash 0-Day Friday
Trailrunner7 writes "Adobe is planning to patch the recently disclosed Flash Player vulnerability on Friday — just four days after it was disclosed — for users on Windows, Mac OS X and Linux. The vulnerability is being used in targeted attacks right now that use malicious Word documents. Adobe said it plans to push out the Flash Player patch for Google Chrome today, as part of the Chrome release channel, but Reader X users will have to wait till June for a fix."
Impressive.
This one comes in via Word. MS released a security update this week that installs an Office add-in that scans 2003, 2007 & 2010 Office docs for malicious code. Hopefully MS's efforts will prevent the next Adobe security hole.
At least my iPad is still safe.
If the malware is distributed with Word docs, then how can it infect Linux? Does it work with Open/LibreOffice too?
Doesn't Slashdot post this same article every week?
And the whole damn country can be taken down by a media player. Truly fascinating.
For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
They are planning to patch Friday?
Why does Friday need patching?
Personally, I've had such ongoing, persistent library and software problems since I switched to 64-bit in 2006, that at this point I just want to go back to 32 bit. Just last week I had to spend 4 hours fixing a 32-bit library bug. Flash has of course been the single biggest and most obnoxious problem with my still ongoing 64-bit upgrade process.
May the Maths Be with you!
It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
I miss reading a Slashdot article about a 0-day (within hours of the actual vulnerability), then going to patch it and discover I'd already patched via my distro's repository.
Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
Personally, I've had such ongoing, persistent library and software problems since I switched to 64-bit in 2006, that at this point I just want to go back to 32 bit.
Meanwhile every computer I own that has a 64-bit CPU runs 64-bit Linux and I've never seen any issue with the 64-bitness other than Adobe's inability to ship a working 64-bit Flash plugin.
A bit hard to find, but this specific vulnerability is in "10.2.153.1 and earlier versions (Adobe Flash Player 10.2.154.25 and earlier for Chrome users) for Windows, Macintosh, Linux and Solaris, Adobe Flash Player 10.2.156.12 and earlier versions for Android, and the Authplay.dll component that ships with Adobe Reader and Acrobat X (10.0.2) and earlier 10.x and 9.x versions for Windows and Macintosh operating systems."
Its funny to see everyone arguing over what zero day means ...
Back in my day, and yes, I'm an old geezer apparently, zero day meant ... the first day it was discovered.
zero day warez releases were released the same day as the software hit the shelves or went on sale somewhere.
The next day, it was no longer zero day, it would be 1 day.
You also had pre-release warez of course, for things that were available on ftp sites or IRC before the public release, also commonly called zero day warez as well.
You wouldn't go to a 'zero day' warez site and expect to find something released 2 days ago, it would have been cycled out and off the site before then. Group distro sites and such being an entirely different beast as some hard larger archives and such.
Its amusing to me to see all the young'ens talk about zero day like they invented it and know exactly what it means, but I'm sorry to inform you that the way zero day is used this decade is much different than they way it was used a decade ago, mostly because of silly bloggers who don't know what it actually meant constantly referring to something new as zero day regardless of how long it had been known or public.
And for anyone who posts a link to wikipedia for a definition of zero day ... keep in mind, I STOPPED using the term before wikipedia even EXISTED, and its hardly an authoritative source (neither am I for that matter of course) for anything. Just because its on wikipedia doesn't mean its true or that the page on wikipedia is accurate. Have we learned nothing about crowd sourced websites in the last 10 years?
Anyone, you guys go on and argue over your silliness about zero day, us old geezers will sit back and laugh about how you guys missed out on the good old days, and both groups will imagine how we're better than the other group ... because.
Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
Wasn't he a quarterback for the Irish?
More music, fewer hits
I guess, does it push the update out to users?
Try to uninstall Adobe Flash for a week. I did and I can't say that I miss anything.
YouTube:
- The HTML5 beta works rather well with modern browsers like Firefox 4.0 and nearly every video is available. You don't need a Google account. The setting is stored in a cookie.
- If you're on Linux, try Minitube. It's a standalone player for YouTube that uses hardware acceleration.
Thanks to the iPad, more and more web sites offer alternatives to Flash. My preferred news TV station is now streaming both with Ogg/Theora and H.264.
Yes, I can't view the occasional funny cat video because it's only available in Flash format but guess what: I'm still alive.
I don't even have problems with Adobe's 64-bit Flash plugin. What can I say, it just works.
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
Stable Channel release 10.0.648.205 is out. Thanks Google for the incredibly swift response.
It seems they are following in suit behind Microsoft with the "we will patch it when we feel like it" attitude. Disappointing.
Here's the summary of the conversation:
Him: dude, it's happened again.
Me: too much porn man.
Him: I didn't do anything, even used Chrome and Firefox
Me: which site did you go to?
Him: it's my office computer, I can't look at porn here.
Me: OK, maybe there's not enough porn on your computer.
So still waiting on that patch. When was that going to be released again?
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