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Understand the Log4j2 vulnerability and learn how you can tell (and what you should do) if your Gradle or Maven applications are exposed.
Apache Log4j Mitigation Summary Attackers are exploiting a vulnerability in the Log4j logging platform on systems running Apache software that is written in Java and utilizes the log4j library.
The vulnerability in Apache Log4j could allow hackers to plant a backdoor and launch their cyberattack months or years in the future.
The new Log4j vulnerability is similar to Log4Shell in that it also affects the logging library, but this DoS flaw has to do with Context Map lookups, not JNDI.
Threat actors now exploit the critical Apache Log4j vulnerability named Log4Shell to infect vulnerable devices with the notorious Dridex banking trojan or Meterpreter.
Why you may already be at risk, how to detect and mitigate the Log4j vulnerabilities now, and how to improve your code security in the future.
Log4j is a programming code written in Java and created by volunteers within the Apache Software Foundation to run across a handful of platforms: Apple's macOS, Windows and Linux.
Apache Software Foundation President David Nalley testifies to a Senate committee about the Log4j vulnerability. The discovery of easily exploitable weaknesses in Log4j, an open source piece of ...
Log4j is a programming code written in Java and created by volunteers within the Apache Software Foundation to run across a handful of platforms: Apple's macOS, Windows and Linux.
In December 2021, a vulnerability in the open source Log4J logging service used by developers to monitor their Java applications first came to light, leaving enterprises scrambling to patch ...