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DESCRIPTION: Rajesh Sethumadhavan has reported a vulnerability in Yahoo! Messenger, which can be exploited by malicious people to compromise a user's system.
Posted by raven on Thursday, July 19, 2007 @ 19:14:53 EDT (802 reads) (Read More... | 1463 bytes more | Score: 0)
Themes Released!
wicked writes "Hello, Just wanted to let the community know that www.DesignWicked.com has Released 2 New Themes!
DW-BF2: Which is based of the FPS game Battlefield 2.
DW-Fractal: Dark type of theme designed by DesignWicked and ZeroniX.
Posted by raven on Sunday, July 15, 2007 @ 21:32:13 EDT (532 reads) ( | Score: 0)
Mac Styled PHPNuke theme Released
Mars writes "PortalThemes - Mac PHPNuke Theme Released
MacTheme is a gorgeous fast loading PHPNuke Theme designed for a Mac technology site.
Preview the theme at the PortalThemes PHPNuke Themes test site.
Select mactheme in the top left dropdown list.
Includes a matching forum theme.
PSD file included for the header and topic icons.
BTW - celebrate the great network of innovation...It never ever stops working and thinking"
Posted by raven on Sunday, July 15, 2007 @ 21:23:55 EDT (421 reads) ( | Score: 0)
Italian develops first multi-site Web-mail worm
nb1 writes "An Italian security researcher this week has developed the first Web-based e-mail worm capable of taking advantage of cross site scripting(XSS) vulnerabilities in multiple Web-mail services. Rosario Valotta described the new form of worm on his blog. The proof of concept, called Nduja Connection, could spread faster than one targeting only a single Web-mail provider, he said.
E-mail worms propagate by extracting contact information from the address book of each infected user, and then sending out an e-mail with the worm payload to each contact -- a user needs only to open an infected e-mail message to spread the worm. Prior concept e-mail worms have been restricted to affecting only one e-mail client, however, the Nduja Connection worm has the potential to spread faster due to it's ability to infect users of four different Web e-mail clients.
Last Visit 5 is an administrative module which is designed to work with PHP-Nuke versions 6.5 and higher. Last Visit is widely known to be one of the most useful membership management tools available to PHP-Nuke users. Last Visit 5 is highly configurable and easy to navigate. Many of the features listed will function according to your personal settings. Below is a list of some of the things Last Visit 5 offers and can do."
Posted by raven on Friday, July 13, 2007 @ 23:01:49 EDT (485 reads) ( | Score: 0)
Legal Module for RavenNuke[tm] NOW Available!
forgotz writes "DaDaNuke in association with Montego Scripts, is pleased to announce the release of Legal Module for RavenNuke(tm)! Visit here for screens. Follow this link for download details (log in/registration required). Legal Module for RavenNuke(tm) is a complete legal notification and feed-back system, allowing for site and user legal protection. Fully customizable from your RavenNuke(tm) administration panel. New features include... - 100% XHTML 1.0 Transitional Compliance! - nukeWYSIWYG Integration - RavenNuke(tm) 2.10.xx Feedback Module Integration"
Posted by raven on Friday, July 13, 2007 @ 22:34:10 EDT (555 reads) ( | Score: 0)
Firefox and IE together brew up security trouble
nb1 writes "Users could face a "highly critical" risk if they have both IE and Firefox version 2.0, or later, loaded on their computer. The trouble begins when browsing a malicious site while using IE and it registers a "firefoxurl://" URI (uniform resource identifier) handler, which allows the browser to interact with specific resources on the Web. As a result, users may find their systems remotely compromised.
"It's a little bit of both," said Oliver Friedrichs, director of Symantec's Security Response Center. "You have two very complex applications that are not playing well together and leading to a security issue. The components themselves are secure as stand-alone products but not together."
"Firefox is the current attack vector, but Internet Explorer is to blame for not escaping...characters when passing on the input to the command line," said Larholm, in response to a reader's comments. "I agree that Firefox could have registered its URL handler with pure DDE (dynamic data exchange, the protocol for information exchange) instead and thereby have avoided the possibility of a command-line argument injection, but IE should still be able to safely launch external applications."