The unpatched Java vulnerability reported last week could be exploited by malware to infect your system, although no such infections have been discovered to date. Dennis O'Reilly began writing about ...
Next week’s Patch Tuesday updates for Windows will include a monumental security fix. An update to Internet Explorer, for installation on PCs running Windows 7 Service Pack 1 or Windows 8.x, will ...
Firefox, Chome, and Safari let you. But short of a complex, CERT-documented process, there's no reliable way to disable Java in IE No doubt you’ve heard the news: Oracle released Java 7, Update 11 on ...
Visual C/C++ and Visual Basic programmers know how easy it is to embed a Web browser within an application. They have to just drag and drop the Web browser component on to the application's frame in ...
Java is a security headache, not just for users and Oracle, its provider, but also for other software companies that have to deal with it, as well. Microsoft has taken steps to address this problem by ...
This week's zero-day threat involving multiple versions of Internet Explorer may frequently leverage the presence of Java on the infected machine. The memory corruption vulnerability, which was ...
I could use some assistance here. I need to run two instances of Internet Explorer (on one machine) with two different versions of the JRE.<BR><BR>I <I>must</I> have Sun Java 1.3.1_02 in one browser ...
Web browsers Google Chrome, Internet Explorer and Firefox along with Windows 8 and Java have been exploited in the Pwn2Own hacking contest in Canada today. Each attack at the CanSecWest competition ...
As the lines are blurred between mobile technology and traditional form factors, and mobile devices are often used to manipulate confidential data for both personal and business use, encryption of ...
Microsoft announced that it will block older ActiveX controls in Internet Explorer, starting with Java. Next week’s Microsoft Patch Tuesday security bulletins will not only bring nine new security ...
by Rob Williams — Thursday, March 07, 2013, 03:15 PM EDT You've got to love hacker conferences. Software vulnerabilities are never going away, that much is obvious, but it's with competitions at ...