http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/01/10/us-java-security-idUSBRE90919X20130110
By Jim Finkle
Thu Jan 10, 2013
Pictures
Singer Austin Renfroe performs at the Intel booth during the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. REUTERS/Steve Marcus
What's new in Vegas
The latest gadgets on display at CES. Slideshow
Follow Reuters
Facebook
Twitter
RSS
YouTube
Recommended Video
Trainee pilot lands plane after losing wheel (0:28)
Play Video
Trainee pilot lands plane after losing wheel (0:28)
India gang rape: 'nobody helped us' (1:47)
Play Video
India gang rape: 'nobody helped us' (1:47)
Iran shows new combat helicopter (0:44)
Play Video
Iran shows new combat helicopter (0:44)
10 Foods That ARe Healthier Than You Think
10 Foods That ARe Healthier Than You Think
(Food Network)
SAP's CIO Hits CES to Understand Consumerization of IT
SAP's CIO Hits CES to Understand Consumerization of IT
(CIO)
Trainee pilot lands plane after losing wheel (0:28)
Play Video
India gang rape: 'nobody helped us' (1:47)
Play Video
Iran shows new combat helicopter (0:44)
Play Video
10 Foods That ARe Healthier Than You Think
SAP's CIO Hits CES to Understand Consumerization of IT
[?]
Read
One student critically wounded in California school shooting | Video
4:19pm EST
1
Special Report: The latest foreclosure horror: the zombie title
1:58pm EST
2
Ex-wife hog-ties Florida man, drags him behind truck: police
12:07pm EST
3
Indian rape accused says police tortured him: lawyer | Video
1:53pm EST
4
UPDATE 6-Founder of Kurdish PKK among three women slain in Paris
1:33pm EST
5
Discussed
105
Obama says U.S. can’t afford more showdowns over debt, deficits
91
AIG may join bailout suit against U.S. government
75
DNA pioneer James Watson takes aim at ‘cancer establishments’
Sponsored Links
Image Ad Internet Marketing Degree
Learn SEO, PPC, PR, Email and Mobile Marketing. Free info.
Image Ad IT Training and Certification
Get IT and business training in Microsoft, Cisco, VMware, ITIL, PMP, and more.
Image Ad Advance in the Growing Field of HR
Prepare for PHR or SPHR Certification Exams with 100% Online Training
Ads by Marchex
Experts urge PC users to disable Java, cite security flaw
inShare5
Share this
Email
Print
Related News
Oracle buys web firm Eloqua to boost cloud presence
Thu, Dec 20 2012
Analysis & Opinion
Time to create a holistic mobile ecosystem
Three tech predictions for 2013
Related Topics
Tech »
Media »
Cyber Crime »
By Jim Finkle
Thu Jan 10, 2013 5:06pm EST
(Reuters) - Computer users are being advised by security experts to disable Oracle Corp's widely used Java software after a security flaw was discovered in the past day that they say hackers are exploiting to attack computers.
"Java is a mess. It's not secure," said Jaime Blasco, Labs Manager with AlienVault Labs. "You have to disable it."
Java, which is installed on hundreds of millions of PCs around the globe, is a computer language that enables programmers to write software using just one set of code that will run on virtually any type of computer.
It is used so that Web developers can make sites accessible from browsers running on Microsoft Corp Windows PCs or Macs from Apple Inc.
-----
Moore said machines running on Mac OS X, Linux or Windows all appear to be vulnerable to attack.
Marc Maiffret, chief technology officer with BeyondTrust, said that businesses may need to keep using Java to access some websites and Internet-based programs that run on the technology.
"The challenge is mainly for businesses, however, which have to use it for some applications," he said. "Oracle simply needs to do a lot more to secure Java and get their act together."
Security experts said the risk of attack is currently high because developers of several popular tools known as exploit kits that criminals use to attack PCs have added software that allows hackers to exploit the newly discovered bug in Java to attack computers.
No comments:
Post a Comment