Right now as I check Amazon, Adobe Flash Pro CS5 is on sale for only $606. Please take a moment to understand Adobe’s business model and I think you’ll also understand my ire. I believe everyone should be paid for their work JBV. For Flash (or Shockwave too, I guess) people are just stuck. Back to the topic at hand: who the hell is using Shockwave, and why the hell does it need to be a completely separate player from Flash? Especially if it’s duplicating the security problems in both applications!Īt least I could uninstall Adobe’s PDF products and use comparable ones like Foxit or Sumatra. The cynic in me suspects Adobe of monetizing their security flaws depending on how many Reg Mechanic/TimesReader/Mcafee installs they get paid for, you can insinuate that the real reason they ramped up their patching program is to reel in the easy money. If Microsoft tried folding MS Office trial versions into every Black Tuesday patch they’d get dragged over the coals. Where the hell do those at Adobe get off trying to get paid while patching their garbage software? How could they think it’s appropriate to hoist pay-per-install toolbars and trash onto the backs of these critical updates. I believe I whined about this earlier but still I’m so irritated I’m going to do it again. This entry was posted on Thursday 28th of October 2010 04:35 PM Chances are good that your copy of Firefox (assuming it is semi-recent) has already downloaded this update, which brings Firefox to version 3.6.12 If you haven’t already been prompted to restart Firefox, click “Help” in the menu bar on top and look for an item that says “Apply Downloaded Update Now.” Otherwise, it’s available from Mozilla’s home page. In other patch news, Mozilla has released an update that fixes a critical flaw that security experts warned this week was being used to attack Firefox users. 9, 2010, but that it doesn’t expect to release an update to clobber the problem on Acrobat/Reader until the following week. The company says it plans to issue a fix for the bug in Flash by Nov. 10.1.85.3).Įven so, Adobe plans to fix the issue in Flash before tackling it in Reader and Acrobat. The flaw also exists in ubiquitous Adobe’s Flash Player, although the company said it is not currently aware of attacks targeting the latest version of Flash (v. True to form, Adobe released a separate advisory today warning that hackers were targeting a critical flaw in the latest version of its Acrobat and PDF Reader products.Īdobe says the Acrobat/Reader vulnerability could cause a crash and potentially allow an attacker to take control of the affected computer, and that there are reports that this vulnerability is being actively exploited in the wild against Adobe Reader and Acrobat 9.x. I opted to untick the check mark next to that option before proceeding with the rest of the install, which was otherwise uneventful.ĭue to Adobe’s huge market share and apparent abundance of as-yet-undiscovered security holes, life with Adobe’s products can feel a bit like playing Whac-a-Mole: Just when you’ve patched one Adobe product it seems like there’s another one under assault by attackers. When I tested the Shockwave installer, it included a “free PC performance scan from PC Tools’s Registry Mechanic. Before you blithely click through the process, keep a lookout for pre-checked “free” software that will install alongside this Shockwave update if you simply accept all the default options. Updates are available for Mac and Windows computers, from this link. The Shockwave patch plugs 11 security holes in program, most of which attackers could use remotely to take control over an affected system. The software maker also is warning that attackers are targeting a previously unidentified security hole in its Acrobat and PDF Reader products.
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