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: Apprentice
5/20/2019 | 10:27:09 AM
There is always resistance to any novel idea to get people in to the Security (or IT) field, even if it's entry level and even if it's capturing people already skilled in other areas. That's entirely predictable if we understand that we all self-justify and think the only path that is "good" is the one we took. You see those arguments constantly re: degress are good vs. bad, certs are good vs. bad, etc. So unless YOU had something like a 3-4 month boot camp on ramp then it sounds like a bad idea? "It's not how I did it!" crows the peacock! We need to realize how other people get into the field doesn't undermine our achievements and get over it. Then there is the whole fear of competition, change, or whatever. The Security field has a lot of change and competition in it... so let's get past that and just pull up our big people pants. Get to work solving the problem instead of causing more resistance.
One of the key global competitve advantages is getting ALL your smart people working on tough problems, as opposed to letting societal frameworks narrowly restrict your talent pool. Being good at Security has little to do with a demographic, because your individual characterists (e.g. persistence, analytics, vision, etc.) that make you good at this line of work (or not) always trumps any generic demographic stereotypes. So a targeted outreach to attract an otherwise alienated talent pool (and half the population at that) is a good idea if it brings more smart, talented, and competent people to work on Security problems, right?