Posts Tagged ‘adobe’

Adobe Confirms 0-Day Vulnerability With No Patch

Yesterday SecurityFocus posted a piece of code that could exploit the current and a couple of older versions of Adobe Reader. Today, Adobe has acknowledged the 0-day vulnerability and advises users to disable JavaScript in the PDF viewer. The vulnerability exists in the Windows, Mac, and Linux versions of the reader and allows code execution with the privileges of the user running the application. Since the problem lies in Adobe’s implementation of JavaScript, Adobe has recommended disabling JavaScript in the application until a patch has been released.

According to ComputerWorld, some security researchers have gone so far as to tell users to switch PDF viewers. Personally, I don’t have a need for Adobe Reader since OS X has Preview and Ubuntu comes with Document Viewer “out of the box”. If you must continue to use Adobe Reader, the option can be found here once in the Preferences (you access it from multiple places in the menu in each OS, but the window looks the same once in):
adobe-disable-javascript

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Filed under News : Comments (0) : Apr 29th, 2009

Adobe Bringing Flash to More Platforms

It seems that Adobe is seeing the threat of Microsoft Silverlight to its Flash platform and is taking Flash to more platforms. The two most noticeable platforms that Adobe is missing in its lineup are 64-bit Linux and iPhone support. Yesterday, news reached the blogosphere that support for both platforms was coming. An alpha for the 64-bit Linux platform has been announced and Adobe will finally support both 32 and 64 bit versions of the “big three” desktop operating systems: Windows, OS X, and Linux. Adobe support for the iPhone rumors have been flying for some time, but yesterday Adobe announced it would be focusing on a build for the ARM platform. Of course, the iPhone isn’t the only phone that runs on ARM processors, but it’s evidence that Adobe is focusing its efforts on mobile phones, possibly the iPhone. Steve Jobs has said a few times that Flash was too heavy for the phone to handle and that Flash Lite was too stripped down to be useful. The lack of Flash and Java support were the two biggest complaints that Apple received in its lawsuit in the U.K. over its ads claiming you can get to “all the Internet”. Microsoft’s Silverlight platform is still missing on the iPhone and is sounds as though that won’t happen for the time. Flash support on more devices and platforms will help Flash remain the dominant platform in multimedia web content, no matter what technology comes out as being the easiest and most efficient.

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Filed under Tech Trends : Comments (0) : Nov 19th, 2008