A "deadly serious" bug potentially affecting hundreds of millions of computers, servers and devices has been discovered.
The flaw has been found in a software component known as Bash, which is a part of many Linux systems as well as Apple's Mac operating system.
The bug, dubbed Shellshock, can be used to remotely take control of almost any system using Bash, researchers said.
Some experts said it was more serious than Heartbleed, discovered in April.
"Whereas something like Heartbleed was all about sniffing what was going on, this was about giving you direct access to the system," Prof Alan Woodward, a security researcher from the University of Surrey, told the BBC.
"The door's wide open." Full story...
Related posts:
The flaw has been found in a software component known as Bash, which is a part of many Linux systems as well as Apple's Mac operating system.
The bug, dubbed Shellshock, can be used to remotely take control of almost any system using Bash, researchers said.
Some experts said it was more serious than Heartbleed, discovered in April.
"Whereas something like Heartbleed was all about sniffing what was going on, this was about giving you direct access to the system," Prof Alan Woodward, a security researcher from the University of Surrey, told the BBC.
"The door's wide open." Full story...
Related posts:
- NSA said to exploit Heartbleed bug for intelligence for years...
- Heartbleed: don't rush to update passwords, security experts warn...
- The real threat from the Heartbleed security flaw is the NSA...
- Heartbleed: Moving toward government control of the internet...
- New vulnerability found in every single version of Internet Explorer...
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