Qualys

Vulnerabilities are turning into actively exploited flaws at a rapid pace, often within the same day. This according to research from security vendor Qualys.

Former NCSC Director of Incident Management John Noble, opening the Qualys Security Conference (QSC) in London, warned that much of what he would say would be “to use a British expression, bleedin’ obvious”. He was right. And that's a problem. “My colleagues in the NCSC [say] patching remains

Millions of servers globally are exposed to 21 new bugs in Exim -- a widely used mail server -- with several of the vulns able, when chained, to give an attacker full remote code execution (RCE) as an all-powerful root user. As The Stack first reported, April 22, "several&