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3 Must-Fix Vulnerabilities Top Oracle CPU Patches


From: InfoSec News <alerts () infosecnews org>
Date: Wed, 17 Oct 2012 04:27:31 -0500 (CDT)

http://www.darkreading.com/vulnerability-management/167901026/security/news/240009195/3-must-fix-vulnerabilities-top-oracle-cpu-patches.html

By Ericka Chickowski
Contributing Writer
Dark Reading
Oct 17, 2012

Systems administrators on all IT fronts will have their hands busy patching Oracle vulnerabilities across the software giant's portfolio with the release this week of the company's quarterly Critical Patch Update. Security experts warn enterprises to pay particular attention to this last CPU of the year, which today took the wraps off over 100 fixes affecting 10 different product groups, with one or more vulnerabilities in each group open to remote exploitation without exploitation.

Of particular note among the fixed vulnerabilities named by Oracle were two flaws with a CVSS base score of 10.0, one for the Core RDBMS database product and one for Oracle Fusion Middleware's JRockit component, as well as another MySQL flaw with a CVSS score of 9.0. According to Oracle, the highly critical JRockit fix was actually part of a broader Java SE Critical Patch to address multiple vulnerabilities affecting the Java Runtime Environment, some of which security pundits expected to address zero-day vulnerabilities disclosed by Security Explorations last month.

"Many were anticipating Oracle would patch Java Runtime Environment (JRE), which they did with Java Runtime Environment Version 7 Update 9 and Version 6 Update 37," says Marcus Carey, security Researcher for Rapid7. "I advise everyone who needs Java to update as soon as possible."

According to Wolfgang Kandek, CTO of Qualys, Java is a frequently neglected piece of software within many enterprise patch processes, an opportunity many hackers have not failed to take advantage of.

"In our research into the vulnerability update cycle, we frequently see Java as being one of the slowest moving applications to be updated, frequently many update cycles behind in patching," Kandek says. "Attackers have adapted to this reality, and many modern exploits go first for a Java based attack, as they know that existing, well-known vulnerabilities can be exploited reliably."

[...]


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