Month: May 2023

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May 04, 2023Ravie LakshmananAPI Management / Vulnerability Three new security flaws have been disclosed in Microsoft Azure API Management service that could be abused by malicious actors to gain access to sensitive information or backend services. This includes two server-side request forgery (SSRF) flaws and one instance of unrestricted file upload functionality in the API
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The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has urged organizations to incorporate the Covered List created by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) into their risk management plans. The list encompasses a number of communications equipment and service providers that have been determined by the US government to pose a potential national security risk according
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A quick dive into the murky world of cyberespionage and other growing threats facing managed service providers – and their customers ESET telemetry from Q4 2022 saw the start of a new campaign by MuddyWater, a cyberespionage group linked to Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS) and active since at least 2017. The group
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German IT service provider Bitmarck has confirmed bringing all of its customer and internal systems offline due to a cyber-attack discovered over the weekend. Writing on a temporary website on Sunday (and then on Monday), the company said the cyber-attack was detected by its early warning systems. “In compliance with our security protocol, we have
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May 02, 2023Ravie LakshmananNetwork Security / Vulnerability Cybersecurity researchers have uncovered weaknesses in a software implementation of the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) that could be weaponized to achieve a denial-of-service (DoS) condition on vulnerable BGP peers. The three vulnerabilities reside in version 8.4 of FRRouting, a popular open source internet routing protocol suite for Linux
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by Paul Ducklin We’ve written about the uncertainty of Apple’s security update process many times before. We’ve had urgent updates accompanied by email notifications that warned us of zero-day bugs that needed fixing right away, because crooks were already onto them… …but without even the vaguest description of what sort of criminals, and what they