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Adobe Systems Inc. patched its free Reader and commercial Acrobat software late yesterday to plug the latest in what one researcher called an “epidemic” of JavaScript vulnerabilities in the ...
Users should disable JavaScript in Adobe’s Reader and Acrobat tools to protect themselves until a patch for a just-disclosed vulnerability is available, security experts said today. The advice ...
But since Adobe has admitted the flaw exists in another Adobe product it is worth bringing up again. The issue is JavaScript and the way that Acrobat and Flash (the plug-in for Flash and Flash ...
Sophos – an IT security and data protection firm, has reportedly counseled software provider Adobe to start disabling JavaScript in its products by default. This is in direct reaction to the ...
Security experts say that, aside from keeping Reader up-to-date, the best way to avoid these attacks is to disable JavaScript in Adobe’s software (do this by unchecking the “Enable JavaScript ...
It’s such an important issue that I feel compelled to add to the torrent of articles covering the topic. Adobe has finally patched the javascript-execution bug that was (and is) being exploited in the ...
Security experts say that, aside from keeping Reader up-to-date, the best way to avoid these attacks is to disable JavaScript in Adobe’s software (do this by unchecking the “Enable JavaScript ...
Security researchers found 134 vulnerabilities in the way apps such as Adobe Acrobat and Microsoft Word handle JavaScript. Experts developed a tool to help them with the task and called it Cooper, in ...
Security experts today urged Adobe Reader and Acrobat users to disable the JavaScript option until a patch is issued for a just-disclosed vulnerability. Users should disable JavaScript in Adobe ...
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