Update now! Apple patches vulnerabilities on iPhone and iPad

Categories: Exploits and vulnerabilities

Categories: News

Tags: Apple

Tags: iOS

Tags: iPad

Tags: 17.0.3

Tags: CVE-2023-42824

Tags: CVE-2023-5217

Apple has issued an emergency update to patch two vulnerabilities, including an actively exploited one.

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The post Update now! Apple patches vulnerabilities on iPhone and iPad appeared first on Malwarebytes Labs.

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Are you looking forward to the new age of mobile app insecurity?

A contact recently told me that Apple handles thousands of inquiries from people who have forgotten or misplaced their Apple ID logins every day. That’s probably why Apple recently made it easier to access your Apple ID using any known email address.

But Apple reps are also inundated with requests related to third-party apps over which they have no control. As the EU looks to force Apple into allowing apps from alternative app stores onto its devices, a practice known as sideloading, the user experience with Apple devices — and the flood of inquiries and complaints — is about to get much, much worse.

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Message to IT: Yes, you should install Apple security updates

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Zero trust and why it matters to the Apple enterprise

Once upon a time, digital business sat inside the security perimeter. Devices were kept in offices, shared the same network, and were protected by antivirus software, firewalls, and software updates. This system wasn’t perfect and became increasingly specialized, with security teams, networking teams, and others all working in different sectors.

With mobility, this changed. Devices were unleashed from their locations, used their own networks, and stood outside of traditional corporate endpoint protection.

The pandemic accelerated these changes, fostering the evolution of innovative security protections outside of traditional perimeters, such as around zero-trust. The global zero trust security market is now expected to reach $99 billion by 2030, up from $23 billion in 2021.

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Pegasus spyware and how it exploited a WebP vulnerability

Categories: Android

Categories: Apple

Categories: Exploits and vulnerabilities

Tags: Pegasus

Tags: spyware

Tags: nso

Tags: webp

Tags: libwebp

Tags: buffer overflow

The company behind the infamous Pegasus spyware used a vulnerability in almost every browser to plant their malware on victim’s devices.

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The post Pegasus spyware and how it exploited a WebP vulnerability appeared first on Malwarebytes Labs.

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