News

Log4Shell is still a threat but it's mostly being used for crypto mining and knocking out websites.
An early analysis of Log4Shell suggests quick action by tech vendors and open-source software developers averted a crisis. But the bug will lurk in systems for years to come.
This week's Java roundup for December 13th, 2021, features news from JDK 19, updates on the Log4Shell vulnerability, vendor statements on Log4Shell related to their products, point releases on ...
The Log4Shell vulnerabilities in the widely used Log4j software are still leveraged by threat actors today to deploy various malware payloads, including recruiting devices into DDoS botnets and ...
Also known as Log4Shell, the vulnerability is now being used by threat actors linked to governments in China, Iran, North Korea, and Turkey, as well as access brokers used by ransomware gangs.
Log4Shell is a zero-day vulnerability — named as such since affected organizations have zero days to patch their systems — that allows attackers to remotely run code on vulnerable servers ...
Considering recent APT41 attacks, organizations that continue to leave the Log4Shell flaw unaddressed are hitting the snooze button when it comes to the wake-up calls from attackers.
Log4Shell is the name given to a critical zero-day vulnerability that surfaced on Thursday when it was exploited in the wild in remote-code compromises against Minecraft servers.
HackerOne CISO Chris Evans looks back at how the security community successfully rose to the challenge of Log4Shell, and saved end-user organisations millions ...
Open source isn’t going away anytime soon — just the opposite — and hackers know this. As for what Log4Shell says about open-source security, I think it raises more questions than it answers.
As Log4Shell wreaks havoc, payroll service reports ransomware attack Kronos outage will last several weeks. Firm advises customers to use other services.