Apple Patches Zero-Day Flaw Used in 'Sophisticated' Attack
CVE-2025-43300 is the latest zero-day bug used in cyberattacks against "targeted individuals," which could signify spyware or nation-state hacking.
Patch management fixes known software flaws before attackers exploit them, reducing intrusion risk; prioritize critical systems and verify deployment.
Search across headline titles and summaries.
Background for this topic.
Patch is a software, firmware, or configuration update that fixes a defect, including a vulnerability an attacker could use to gain access, execute code, escalate privileges, or expose data. Patching reduces the exploitable attack surface across operating systems, applications, network devices, and embedded systems; it does not remove risk from unsupported or misconfigured assets, and updates can sometimes introduce compatibility or availability problems.
Effective patch management starts with an accurate inventory and vulnerability assessment, then prioritizes internet-facing systems, high-impact assets, and flaws known to be exploited. Organizations should test updates where practical, deploy them within defined time limits, verify installation, and retain rollback or compensating controls when immediate patching is unsafe. Monitoring vendor advisories and threat intelligence can identify urgent fixes, while documenting exceptions and coverage supports vulnerability management and audit requirements.
CVE-2025-43300 is the latest zero-day bug used in cyberattacks against "targeted individuals," which could signify spyware or nation-state hacking.
DARPA's Kathleen Fisher discusses the AI Cyber Challenge at DEF CON 33, and the results that proved how automation can help patch vulnerabilities at scale.
We can strip attackers of their power by implementing layered defenses, ruthless patch management, and incident response that assumes failure and prioritizes transparency.
An attacker is breaking into Linux systems via a widely abused 2-year-old vulnerability in Apache ActiveMQ, installing malware and then patching the flaw.