Enterprise Vulnerabilities
From DHS/US-CERT's National Vulnerability Database
CVE-2023-25012PUBLISHED: 2023-02-02The Linux kernel through 6.1.9 has a Use-After-Free in bigben_remove in drivers/hid/hid-bigbenff.c via a crafted USB device because the LED controllers remain registered for too long.
CVE-2022-37034PUBLISHED: 2023-02-01In dotCMS 5.x-22.06, it is possible to call the TempResource multiple times, each time requesting the dotCMS server to download a large file. If done repeatedly, this will result in Tomcat request-thread exhaustion and ultimately a denial of any other requests.
CVE-2023-0599PUBLISHED: 2023-02-01
Rapid7 Metasploit Pro versions 4.21.2 and lower suffer from a stored cross site scripting vulnerability, due to a lack of JavaScript request string sanitization. Using this vulnerability, an authenticated attacker can execute arbitrary HTML and script code in the target browser against another Metas...
CVE-2023-23750PUBLISHED: 2023-02-01An issue was discovered in Joomla! 4.0.0 through 4.2.6. A missing token check causes a CSRF vulnerability in the handling of post-installation messages.
CVE-2023-23751PUBLISHED: 2023-02-01An issue was discovered in Joomla! 4.0.0 through 4.2.4. A missing ACL check allows non super-admin users to access com_actionlogs.
User Rank: Author
10/3/2014 | 1:19:57 PM
Wth the JP Morgans, Targets and Home Depots becoming poster children on a weekly basis now, it's hard for me to believe cyber concerns have not become major, daily leadership opportunities for CEOs. That said, you're likely right that the "it wont happen to me" attitude will persist for some time to come. The unfortunate reality, though, is that, for pretty much every business, it will happen to them. It's only a matter of time.