Talk about a couple of nags. Adobe Reader and Oracle Java are almost constantly asking to install new updates. What’s with these two, and do you really have to accept all the updating? Hackers can ...
I posted on this some time back and I'm about to trial this on a test group, just wanted a bit of a sanity check really.<BR><BR>What I want to do is keep Acrobat Reader, Java, and Flash Player up with ...
From the year 2000 through today, Java, Adobe Reader and Flash were responsible for 66% of the vulnerabilities exploited by malware on Windows, according to a new study by research group AV-Test ...
I know there are certain ways to do this but I was wondering if there is an easy way to do this? I have tried in the past to push Flash out via Group policy. It was not a success. It would fail on ...
Mozilla has announced that all Firefox plug-ins, barring the most recent version of Flash, will soon require explicit user authorization before being allowed to run ...
Adobe Flash, Adobe Reader, and Oracle’s Java. All three are virtually ubiquitous on modern-day PCs, and all three provide handy-dandy functionality—functionality that, in the case of Flash and Java, ...
Adobe, Microsoft and Oracle today each issued security updates to fix serious vulnerabilities in their products. Adobe released patches for AIR, Acrobat, Flash and Reader, while Microsoft pushed out ...
Secunia's quarterly report on which apps remain chronically unpatched on PCs shows Microsoft, Oracle, and Adobe have the most problematic products Secunia has issued its third-quarter report on the ...
Most admins already know that Java and Adobe’s Flash and Reader are the most vulnerable pieces of software on the average Windows PC. A new analysis from Heimdal Security suggests that while 2014 has ...
Spyware designed to infiltrate government networks can exploit Java, Adobe Reader and Internet Explorer vulnerabilities, researchers say. Research of the malware called MiniDuke by Kaspersky Lab and ...