April is here and with that comes a new monthly
security bulletin from Google which brings fixes and some functional changes to Android that will eventually make its way onto devices running the OS.
The recent
security bulletin from Adobe notes: «We are aware of reports that this vulnerability is being actively exploited in the wild via drive - by - download attacks against systems running Internet Explorer and Firefox on Windows 8.1 and below.»
Not exact matches
Complying with a directive
from the White House, the Department of Labor released last Nov. 16 a proposed rule and interpretive
bulletin to help guide states in developing state - run retirement plans that don't run afoul of the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act.
An investor
bulletin on variable annuities
from the
Securities and Exchange Commission includes a caution to investors to watch out for policy charges.
Bulletins from tax authorities or rulings
from securities commissions would appear with that little yellow «New» tag.
«This
bulletin has two
security patch levels so that Android partners have the flexibility to fix a subset of vulnerabilities that are similar across all Android devices more quickly,» reads an excerpt from a January 2nd, 2018 Android Security B
security patch levels so that Android partners have the flexibility to fix a subset of vulnerabilities that are similar across all Android devices more quickly,» reads an excerpt
from a January 2nd, 2018 Android
Security B
Security Bulletin.
Both of these
security bulletins also inform us about hardware specific software fixes with components
from MediaTek, NVIDIA, and Qualcomm.
The
security patches included in this month's
bulletin range
from Android 5.1.1 all the way through Android 8.0 and also include a number of hardware based patches as well.
Each month we get a
bulletin from Google listing the
security concerns being addressed in the update, as well as who discovered the update and where they are currently employed.