Microsoft is addressing 67 vulnerabilities this June 2025 Patch Tuesday. Microsoft has evidence of in-the-wild exploitation for just one of the vulnerabilities published today, and that is reflected in CISA KEV.
Separately, Microsoft is aware of existing public disclosure for one other freshly published vulnerability. Microsoft’s luck holds for a ninth consecutive Patch Tuesday, since neither of today’s zero-day vulnerabilities are evaluated as critical severity at time of publication. Today also sees the publication of eight critical remote code execution (RCE) vulnerabilities.
Read more…
Source: Rapid7
Sign up for our Newsletter
The latest news and insights delivered right to your inbox.
Related:
- F5 Releases Security Advisories Addressing Multiple Vulnerabilities
May 4, 2022
F5 has released security advisories on vulnerabilities affecting multiple products, including various versions of BIG-IP. Included in the release is an advisory for CVE-2022-1388, which allows undisclosed requests to bypass the iControl REST authentication in BIG-IP. An attacker could exploit CVE-2022-1388 to take control of an affected system. CISA encourages users and administrators to review the ...
- CISA Adds Five Known Exploited Vulnerabilities to Catalog
May 4, 2022
CISA has added five new vulnerabilities to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalog, based on evidence of active exploitation. These types of vulnerabilities are a frequent attack vector for malicious cyber actors and pose significant risk to the federal enterprise. Note: to view the newly added vulnerabilities in the catalog, click on the arrow on the ...
- Gear from Netgear, Linksys, and 200 others has unpatched DNS poisoning flaw
May 3, 2022
Hardware and software makers are scrambling to determine if their wares suffer from a critical vulnerability recently discovered in third-party code libraries used by hundreds of vendors, including Netgear, Linksys, Axis, and the Gentoo embedded Linux distribution. The flaw makes it possible for hackers with access to the connection between an affected device and the Internet ...
- Log4j flaw: Thousands of applications are still vulnerable, warn security researchers
April 28, 2022
Months on from a critical zero-day vulnerability being disclosed in the widely-used Java logging library Apache Log4j, a significant number of applications and servers are still vulnerable to cyberattacks because security patches haven’t been applied. First detailed in December, the vulnerability (CVE-2021-44228) allows attackers to remotely execute code and gain access to systems that use Log4j. Not ...
- 2021 Top Routinely Exploited Vulnerabilities
April 27, 2022
CISA, the National Security Agency (NSA), the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Australian Cyber Security Centre (ACSC), the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security (CCCS), the New Zealand National Cyber Security Centre (NZ NCSC), and the United Kingdom’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC-UK) have released a joint Cybersecurity Advisory that provides details on the top ...
- Android security: Flaw in an audio codec left two-thirds of smartphones at risk of snooping, say researchers
April 22, 2022
Millions of Android devices were vulnerable to a remote code execution attack due to flaws in an audio codec that Apple open-sourced years ago but which hasn’t been patched since. Researchers at Check Point discovered a bug in Apple Lossless Audio Codec (ALAC), which is audio-compression technology that Apple open-sourced in 2011. After this, ALAC was ...

