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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 13 declined, 5 accepted (18 total, 27.78% accepted)

Submission + - Oracle Ties Previous All-Time Patch High with January 2020 Updates (threatpost.com)

bobthesungeek76036 writes: Not sure if this is good news (Oracle is very busy patching their stuff) or bad news (Oracle is very busy patching their stuff) but this quarterly cycle they tied their all time high number of vulnerability fixes released. And they are urging folks to not drag their feet in deploying these patches.

The software giant patched 300+ bugs in its quarterly update.

Oracle has patched 334 vulnerabilities across all of its product families in its January 2020 quarterly Critical Patch Update (CPU). Out of these, 43 are critical/severe flaws carrying CVSS scores of 9.1 and above. The CPU ties for Oracle’s previous all-time high for number of patches issued, in July 2019, which overtook its previous record of 308 in July 2017.

The company said in a pre-release announcement that some of the vulnerabilities affect multiple products. “Due to the threat posed by a successful attack, Oracle strongly recommends that customers apply Critical Patch Update patches as soon as possible,” it added.

“Some of these vulnerabilities were remotely exploitable, not requiring any login data; therefore posing an extremely high risk of exposure,” said Boris Cipot, senior security engineer at Synopsys, speaking to Threatpost. “Additionally, there were database, system-level, Java and virtualization patches within the scope of this update. These are all critical elements within a company’s infrastructure, and for this reason the update should be considered mandatory. At the same time, organizations need to take into account the impact that this update could have on their systems, scheduling downtime accordingly.”


Oracle

Submission + - Sun/Oracle T5 servers; too late? (theregister.co.uk)

bobthesungeek76036 writes: On March 26th, Larry Ellison and always with fashionable haircut John Fowler announced the new line of SPARC servers from Oracle. Touted as the fastest microprocessor in the world, they put up some impressive SPEC numbers against much more expensive (and older) IBM hardware. Is the industry still interested in SPARC or is it too late for Larry to regain the server market that Sun Microsystems had many moons ago?

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