Oracle Fixes 42 Security Vulnerabilities In Java
wiredmikey writes "Oracle released its quarterly Critical Patch Update (CPU) for April, which addressed a whopping 128 security issues across multiple product families. As part of its update, Oracle released a Java SE Critical Patch Update to plug 42 security holes in Java, 19 with base CVE score of 10 (the highest you can go) and 39 related to the Java Web Start plugin which can be remotely exploited without authentication. According to security analyst Wade Williamson, organizations need to realize that Java will continue to pose a significant risk. 'The first step is for an organization to understand precisely where and why Java is needed,' Williamson wrote. 'Based on the rate of newly discovered vulnerabilities, security teams should assume that Java is and will continue to be vulnerable.' Organizations should to take a long, hard look at Java and answer for themselves if it's worth it, Williamson added. Due to the threat posed by a successful attack, Oracle is strongly recommending that organizations apply the security fixes as soon as possible."
Few sites use Java applets (which is what you uninstalled).
Far more sites use Java to power the site on the server side (Google, Amazon, Ebay, etc).
Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
The reason you have not heard about this more, is that Macs and Firefox/Chrome (not sure about IE) resist the Ask.com installer, so you just don't see it, but the crappy Oracle behavior is in fact going on each time. The result is that naive users are getting this toxic thing installed and it really messes up their whole internet experience.
Hey Oracle: you're pissing away tons of Java goodwill in exchange for pennies form the Ask.com spammers. Who on the heck thought that was a good trade? Like what techie who learns of this behavior is ever going to install Java anywhere? Aren't you trying to make JavaFX into a real client thing?
See http://www.zdnet.com/a-close-look-at-how-oracle-installs-deceptive-software-with-java-updates-7000010038/ for lots of details on how the Ask.com installer tries to trick the users and hide itself. It's kind of interesting arms race between the spamming toolbar and the browser vendors.
These are java APPLET or BROWSER PLUGIN vulnerabilities. Completely different thing.
Slashdot should stop with this misinformation. Java the LANGUAGE is OK. Java Virtual Machine is OK. Servers using Java as server-side language are OK. Java desktop applications are OK.
Java the BROWSER PLUGIN is vulnerable. But Java Browser plugin should never have happened in the first place and should be killed with fire.
So stop with the whole bashing of Java in general. Java is a very good and mature language, with the fastest JVM on planet today, lots of open source 3rd party libraries, servers, frameworks and tools. It's very very good for server-side development.
--Coder