Aggregator
CVE-2024-35908 | Linux Kernel up to 6.1.84/6.6.25/6.8.4 tls_sw_recvmsg memory leak (Nessus ID 210815)
CVE-2024-35987 | Linux Kernel up to 6.6.29/6.8.8 riscv initialization (b008e327fa57/ea6628e4e235/aea702dde7e9)
CVE-2024-35974 | Linux Kernel up to 6.6.27/6.8.6 block blkcg_init_disk initialization (740ffad95ca8/858c489d81d6/8b8ace080319)
CVE-2024-35961 | Linux Kernel up to 6.6.27/6.8.6 devlink_register information disclosure (8c91c6085847/967caa3d37c0/c6e77aa9dd82)
CVE-2024-35971 | Linux Kernel up to 6.1.86/6.6.27/6.8.6 ks8851_irq stack-based overflow
CVE-2024-35991 | Linux Kernel up to 6.6.29/6.8.8 dmaengine drain_workqueue race condition (758071a35d9f/c9b732a9f73e/d5638de827cf / Nessus ID 210815)
CVE-2024-35913 | Linux Kernel up to 6.8.4 time-event.c privilege escalation (222abd95f503/bbe806c294c9 / Nessus ID 210815)
CVE-2024-35963 | Linux Kernel up to 6.8.6 Bluetooth memory corruption (50173882bb18/b2186061d604 / Nessus ID 211369)
CVE-2024-35964 | Linux Kernel up to 6.8.6 Bluetooth memory corruption (0c4a89f46904/9e8742cdfc4b / Nessus ID 211777)
CVE-2024-35965 | Linux Kernel up to 6.1.86/6.8.6 Bluetooth memory corruption (9d42f3733912/8ee0c132a61d/4f3951242ace / Nessus ID 213100)
Ransomware gang known for government attacks claims Maryland transit incident
Kali Linux 2025.3 released with 10 new tools, Wi-Fi enhancements
nodejs 原型链污染新视角
2025青岛网络安全大赛决赛writeup(全部题解)
记一次实战从任意文件下载到代码审计RCE
AICTF 2025 writeup
Malicious SVGs in Phishing Campaigns: How to Detect Hidden Redirects and Payloads
Phishing campaigns are getting harder to spot, sometimes hiding in files you’d never suspect. ANY.RUN’s cybersecurity analysts recently uncovered one such case: a malicious SVG disguised as a PDF, hosted on a legitimate domain and packed with hidden redirects. By mid-September, it scaled into a full spam wave with Microsoft-themed lures. Let’s look at how […]
The post Malicious SVGs in Phishing Campaigns: How to Detect Hidden Redirects and Payloads appeared first on Cyber Security News.
Cyber Risk Isn’t a Backlog Problem. It’s a Parallel Processing Problem.
After nearly a decade of working with Fortune 500 CISOs, I’ve learned two universal truths: Everyone has too many vulnerabilities. Nobody has enough Advil. The vulnerability backlog is like laundry. No matter how many loads you run, it just piles up again. And yet, boards keep asking the same question: “Are we safer today than …
The post Cyber Risk Isn’t a Backlog Problem. It’s a Parallel Processing Problem. appeared first on Security Boulevard.