Fedora EPEL 6 Security Update: drupal7-webform-4.6-1.el6

Resolved Bugs
1205122 – drupal webform: multiple XSS flaws
1199067 – drupal7-webform-4.5 is available
1150458 – drupal7-webform-4.2 is available
1205126 – drupal7-webform: drupal webform: multiple XSS flaws [epel-6]
1204540 – drupal7-webform-4.6 is available
1193356 – drupal7-webform-4.3 is available<br
– Security fix for drupal7-webform module
– Upstream release notes: https://www.drupal.org/node/2457219
– Release notes can be found at https://www.drupal.org/node/2454063
– Update to 4.3
– Release notes can be found at https://www.drupal.org/node/2427257
– Update to 4.2
– Release notes can be found at https://www.drupal.org/node/2381793

CESA-2015:0718 Critical CentOS 5 firefox SecurityUpdate

CentOS Errata and Security Advisory 2015:0718 Critical

Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2015-0718.html

The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently 
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename ) 

i386:
bcfbb97fde3d342e82ec79fa0629cc48de453f829f41cb9276d2a9fbf4424b76  firefox-31.5.3-1.el5.centos.i386.rpm

x86_64:
bcfbb97fde3d342e82ec79fa0629cc48de453f829f41cb9276d2a9fbf4424b76  firefox-31.5.3-1.el5.centos.i386.rpm
21ba58b2e9f34545da89b57579b39b2b5d5e17487b4977a7ecb551433f78ebe6  firefox-31.5.3-1.el5.centos.x86_64.rpm

Source:
641656d3e089753087ed077cb7e08c72e9263259819a6986b3282c35622f7018  firefox-31.5.3-1.el5.centos.src.rpm



CEBA-2015:0721 CentOS 6 cyrus-sasl BugFix Update

CentOS Errata and Bugfix Advisory 2015:0721 

Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2015-0721.html

The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently 
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename ) 

i386:
714d08764ba55bb831eacdbdbdd2cbed8e1d34fd56b4f45d664f61311aba791d  cyrus-sasl-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm
c06f36f17bcc336ac0f4986ae2ba70e11499a9071a4647d21b4b52026ca64877  cyrus-sasl-devel-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm
f3819d13aac78dd90a48ae4fdef9081a27fccd4852e5abdd1b6b5acd989fc202  cyrus-sasl-gssapi-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm
36815d899993a612c184f50aede7fba10bf318475d973d122e300d2d64c4f836  cyrus-sasl-ldap-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm
fdff3dbb8d482d9c49d84abdb8421a622344eff4acb047aeeca8fea51823160a  cyrus-sasl-lib-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm
6321c435b94bde5e3f2bde494ec68af9bc76b4f5496adf7e4dba401cb46d7bfe  cyrus-sasl-md5-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm
2f6f95a8c1b48326f99d4748f363949f8136a021d65dbd290de49ca8541e5ab2  cyrus-sasl-ntlm-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm
7c6664f6cd9204464556f6a5a7b4edb575307f01c50f5a5ca7cbe23c2b12bfc4  cyrus-sasl-plain-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm
40ff6df68375202541b1fa55a237bc7cf6fa493264c8cc4df200ac27fbda00a5  cyrus-sasl-sql-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm

x86_64:
1aaf9cbc93c345e8339ae8ec178f7ce0710fa91f315c73a68d439dfb333e1e0c  cyrus-sasl-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.x86_64.rpm
c06f36f17bcc336ac0f4986ae2ba70e11499a9071a4647d21b4b52026ca64877  cyrus-sasl-devel-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm
b709e78b57feebe010ec362b3ccc8b3ae21159b93321c967844e1f989e4f20ae  cyrus-sasl-devel-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.x86_64.rpm
f3819d13aac78dd90a48ae4fdef9081a27fccd4852e5abdd1b6b5acd989fc202  cyrus-sasl-gssapi-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm
f74352d510608900609bf800771eca4898c4cf84a0be637f5b9f385479c4ab8b  cyrus-sasl-gssapi-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.x86_64.rpm
36815d899993a612c184f50aede7fba10bf318475d973d122e300d2d64c4f836  cyrus-sasl-ldap-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm
e14119703c730f0469b87047dd696436c9fd90574956460b0675270216bf6302  cyrus-sasl-ldap-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.x86_64.rpm
fdff3dbb8d482d9c49d84abdb8421a622344eff4acb047aeeca8fea51823160a  cyrus-sasl-lib-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm
92bf37f8fba52b15726f6cade5bcf35c18acd305a3c472cb9360fedd515965bf  cyrus-sasl-lib-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.x86_64.rpm
6321c435b94bde5e3f2bde494ec68af9bc76b4f5496adf7e4dba401cb46d7bfe  cyrus-sasl-md5-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm
13c8cef3153882e2e53a5a08013f144e323d170ba96dba7bdd7be7c4b9cb35ee  cyrus-sasl-md5-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.x86_64.rpm
2f6f95a8c1b48326f99d4748f363949f8136a021d65dbd290de49ca8541e5ab2  cyrus-sasl-ntlm-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm
7184f41b108c8ffb03c956644dee056dc80357c0b34b25dd0772de8e805f71b9  cyrus-sasl-ntlm-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.x86_64.rpm
7c6664f6cd9204464556f6a5a7b4edb575307f01c50f5a5ca7cbe23c2b12bfc4  cyrus-sasl-plain-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm
339a4d59f82b7554010415b4a7b467dc4efb02a05c86f76abe58dadccbce9fa1  cyrus-sasl-plain-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.x86_64.rpm
40ff6df68375202541b1fa55a237bc7cf6fa493264c8cc4df200ac27fbda00a5  cyrus-sasl-sql-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.i686.rpm
345c504f5698467aa561bca5c3bf33ca69d540b449e6be91c02e7f8607a230e3  cyrus-sasl-sql-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.x86_64.rpm

Source:
a12449366385bb4ad18c1639c79e8999013e9e5cbd90474dfcc3c9269d8554ee  cyrus-sasl-2.1.23-15.el6_6.2.src.rpm



CESA-2015:0718 Critical CentOS 6 firefox SecurityUpdate

CentOS Errata and Security Advisory 2015:0718 Critical

Upstream details at : https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2015-0718.html

The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently 
syncing to the mirrors: ( sha256sum Filename ) 

i386:
d625be286cf865de2e8baa554b9b271e46be166aafd9751909ca010f1d2743ce  firefox-31.5.3-1.el6.centos.i686.rpm

x86_64:
d625be286cf865de2e8baa554b9b271e46be166aafd9751909ca010f1d2743ce  firefox-31.5.3-1.el6.centos.i686.rpm
d454cc191888b66e3c2c7f6aeb57c3008ceee70140d152d248fb1ac39d9fe0e7  firefox-31.5.3-1.el6.centos.x86_64.rpm

Source:
24ded243b15b8907b5c50313ca94cc1aaad83a3a5124c842b2f0fac917b0902b  firefox-31.5.3-1.el6.centos.src.rpm



New ransomware targets gamers

CryptoLocker, the notorious ransomware that shot to prominence in 2013 is back and this time it is targeting gamers.

Reports suggest that the new malware targets several popular games including World of Warcraft, League of Legends and Minecraft.

What is ransomware?

The whole premise of ransomware as an effective malware attack is removing the victim’s access to important or personal files.  It encrypts certain files on your system and then extorts a ransom to unlock them.

Why is malware targeting gamers?

Gamers have become targets for malware writers as they can spend hundreds of hours playing and enjoying a game. Once the game files have been encrypted, the victim will lose access to these files, along with all the progress and achievements they may have unlocked.

How can you stay safe?

There are many things that you can do to help keep your online accounts, including gaming accounts secure.

Don’t share accounts

This is simple advice, and one that game companies often reiterate. No matter how long you’ve been playing with someone online that you don’t know in person, never hand over your details or control of your account. This recent example is enough to discourage you!

Two factor authentication

Just like with other important online accounts such as banking, many online gaming services have introduced two-factor authentication as an additional layer of account security; Blizzard being one of them.

If you’re a gamer, investigate whether or not the games and services you enjoy offer this form of protection.

Download security software

Having up-to-date security software is one of the most important measures we can all take to protect ourselves from malware and online fraud. It can check for malicious links and attachments and help protect your machine from malware.