Apple security update plugs holes in Mac OS X
Apple Computer on Tuesday clamped down on a number of vulnerabilities in its Mac OS X operating system that could pose as backdoors for hackers or malicious users.
In a recommended security release labeled Security Update 2006-004 - the fourth such update this year - Apple said it tightened loose ends in AFP Server, Bluetooth, Bom, DHCP, dyld, fetchmail, gnuzip, ImageIO, LaunchServices, OpenSSH, telnet and WebKit.
Read the complete story Share:
Holographic storage on track for December ship date
- KDE 3.5.4 released
- Google teams up with XM Satellite Radio in advertising pact
- Itunes to give away 70 million songs
- MS launches Live spaces
- Canon launches compact "full HD" camcorder
- US Court publishes trial exhibits of Zacarias Moussaoui case online
- Hybrid HD DVD / Blu-ray players appear unlikely after LG backs off
- Las Vegas braces for computer security gurus
- Rambus "unlawfully" obtained monopoly power, says FTC
Microsoft claims Belkin infringed U2 patent
- Sensory illusions dazzle at graphics conference
- Scientists to launch underwater autonomous robot fleets
- Google and Microsoft blog sites driving Internet record growth
- Blackhat 2006: Explosive risks in RFID-enabled passports?
- Gateway intros $1200 Core 2 Duo desktop PC
- Microsoft and Epic to release "Gears of War" on 12 November
- Inventec postpones production of Palm's Treo 700p
- Alpha Networks ready to produce Google Talk-enabled Wi-Fi phones
- AMD aims to ship more than million Socket 754 Sempron CPUs in emerging markets in Q3
Sponsored
See more
Latest news
Miscellaneous Previous news
Partners




