Security news aggregator

Latest coverage for 0-Day

A 0-Day is a software vulnerability without an available fix, creating risk because defenders have limited time to mitigate exploitation.

1 headlines in this view

Refine the feed

Search across headline titles and summaries.

Tag briefing

Background for this topic.

0-Day describes a software vulnerability unknown to the software maker or unpatched when first exploited. Attackers can use these flaws immediately, as no official fix or signature exists to block the exploit. Such vulnerabilities often affect widely deployed software or hardware, making them valuable for targeted attacks or widespread campaigns.

Because defenders lack patches or reliable detection signatures initially, they must rely on anomaly detection, network monitoring, and threat intelligence to identify suspicious activity linked to 0-day exploits. Rapid patching once a fix is released is critical to reduce exposure. Tracking emerging 0-day threats helps prioritize defensive measures and informs risk management decisions in environments where unpatched vulnerabilities pose significant security risks.

Showing 1 most recent headlines Filtered view
Bank Info Security 2 days, 17 hours ago

Researcher Drops 9th Windows Zero-Day

LegacyHive Is a Local Privilege Escalation BugThe vulnerability hunter in a feud with Microsoft released yet another Windows zero-day Tuesday as promised, though the touted "bone-shattering" disclosure was stripped down to prevent public exploitation. LegacyHive, exploits a profile-loading race condition to access another user's registry hive.