BOSTON, Sept 25 (Reuters) - Hackers have begun exploiting the newly identified "Shellshock" computer bug, using fast-moving worm viruses to scan for vulnerable systems and then infect them, ...
The bash/Shellshock exploit has hit Yahoo’s gaming servers. But, the company says that no customer data was leaked. The exploits were first discovered by security researcher, Jonathan Hall. Hall ...
The vulnerability reported in the GNU Bourne Again Shell (Bash) yesterday, dubbed “Shellshock,” may already have been exploited in the wild to take over Web servers as part of a botnet. More security ...
Security researchers recently uncovered a bug in Bash, a core shell tool used in Linux and Unix computers for the last couple of decades. OS X is built on Unix, so concern arose about the Mac’s ...
Making good on expert predictions that Shellshock vulnerabilities will hold some serious ramifications for Internet infrastructure before the year is out, researchers with MalwareMustDie last week ...
In barely the course of a day, word of the Shellshock exploit has reached Heartbleed-level proportions. But like any security hole du jour, it’s easy to see only the hype and not the hard truth. Here ...
The long, painful rollout of patches to a security flaw in the Bourne Again Shell (bash) has left thousands of systems still vulnerable, and malware based on the vulnerability continues to spread, ...
As if consumers weren’t already suffering from breach fatigue: Experts warn that attackers are exploiting a critical, newly-disclosed security vulnerability present countless networks and Web sites ...
There's a new internet-crippling zero-vulnerability in town called Shellshock. It potentially affects around half of all websites on the internet (around 500 million), and millions or billions more ...
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