Samsung Devices Under Active Exploitation! CISA Warns of Critical Flaw
The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) warned of active exploitation of a medium-severity flaw affecting Samsung devices
Stay informed on the latest CVE entries. Explore critical vulnerabilities and exposures to safeguard your systems from cyber threats and attacks.
Search across headline titles and summaries.
Background for this topic.
CVE is a global system of standardized identifiers for publicly known cybersecurity vulnerabilities. Each record, typically written as CVE-YYYY-NNNN, gives a vulnerability a stable reference and usually includes a description, affected products or versions, and links to advisories or fixes. The CVE Program coordinates the assignment and publication of records through authorized organizations, allowing researchers, vendors, security tools, and defenders to discuss the same flaw without relying on different names.
Practitioners use CVE identifiers to match vulnerabilities across asset inventories, scanners, patch advisories, and threat-intelligence reports. A CVE is an identity, not a severity score or proof that a system is exploitable: prioritization should also consider the affected configuration, exposure, available mitigations, exploit activity, and business impact. Delays in identifying vulnerable versions can leave internet-facing services or embedded components exposed, while incomplete product-to-CVE mapping can cause missed remediation. Security teams should verify the affected versions and vendor guidance before patching or applying workarounds.
The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) warned of active exploitation of a medium-severity flaw affecting Samsung devices
The vulnerability (CVE-2023-32784) was discovered by security researcher Dominik Reichl
Apple on Thursday rolled out security updates to iOS, iPadOS, macOS, tvOS, watchOS, and the Safari web browser to address three new zero-day flaws that it said are being actively exploited in the wild
The notorious cryptojacking group tracked as 8220 Gang has been spotted weaponizing a six-year-old security flaw in Oracle WebLogic servers to ensnare vulnerable instances into a botnet and distribute cryptocurrency mining malware
The second generation version of Belkin's Wemo Mini Smart Plug has been found to contain a buffer overflow vulnerability that could be weaponized by a threat actor to inject arbitrary commands remotely
We observed the threat actor group known as “8220 Gang” employing new strategies for their respective campaigns, including exploits for the Linux utility “lwp-download” and CVE-2017-3506, an Oracle WebLogic vulnerability.