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Browse back issues of Security Newsletter.

  • Issue 98

    • US advanced weaponry is easy to hack, even by low-skilled attackers
    • WikiLeaks releases Amazon Atlas: locations of AWS datacenters

    12th Oct 2018

  • Issue 97

    • How China used a tiny chip to infiltrate U.S. companies
    • New Linux kernel bug affects Red Hat, CentOS, and Debian Distributions

    5th Oct 2018

  • Issue 96

    • Mac Mojave zero-day allows malicious apps to access sensitive info
    • Unwiped drives and servers from NCIX retailer for sale on Craigslist

    27th Sep 2018

  • Issue 95

    • A new CSS-based web attack will crash and restart your iPhone
    • Windows systems vulnerable to FragmentSmack DoS bug

    20th Sep 2018

  • Issue 94

    • No. 1 paid utility in Mac App Store steals browser history, sends it to Chinese server
    • Researcher finds open .git directories on 390.000 sites

    15th Sep 2018

  • Issue 93

    • MEGA.nz Chrome extension temporarily compromised
    • Thousands of MikroTik routers hijacked for eavesdropping

    6th Sep 2018

  • Issue 92

    • New Apache Struts 2 flaw discovered
    • Vulnerability affects all OpenSSH versions

    31st Aug 2018

  • Issue 91

    • L1TF aka Foreshadow: new Intel speculative execution flaws
    • New major vulnerability in Ghostscript/ImageMagick

    23rd Aug 2018

  • Issue 90

    • Compromising HP Officejet printers through fax
    • "Man-in-the-disk" attacks on Android

    15th Aug 2018

  • Issue 89

    • New method simplifies cracking WPA/WPA2 passwords
    • U.S. payment processing services targeted by BGP hijacking attacks

    8th Aug 2018

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