CVE-2014-6368
published 2014-12-11CVE-2014-6368: Microsoft Internet Explorer 11 allows remote attackers to bypass the ASLR protection mechanism via a crafted web site, aka "Internet Explorer ASLR Bypass…
PriorityP425medium4.3CVSS 2.0
AVNACMAuNCNIPAN
EPSS
12.21%
95.7th percentile
Microsoft Internet Explorer 11 allows remote attackers to bypass the ASLR protection mechanism via a crafted web site, aka "Internet Explorer ASLR Bypass Vulnerability."
Affected
1 ranges
| Vendor | Product | Version range | Fixed in |
|---|---|---|---|
| microsoft | internet_explorer | — | — |
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Talos
Microsoft Patch Tuesday for December 2014: Light Month, Some Changes
blogs_talos·2014-12-09·CVSS 5.0
[MEDIUM] Microsoft Patch Tuesday for December 2014: Light Month, Some Changes
## Microsoft Patch Tuesday for December 2014: Light Month, Some Changes
This post was authored by Yves Younan .
Today, Microsoft is releasing their final Update Tuesday of 2014. Last year, the end of year update was relatively large. This time, it’s relatively light with a total of seven bulletins, covering 24 CVEs. Three of those bulletins are rated critical and four are considered to be important. Microsoft has made a few changes to the way they report their bulletins. Microsoft has dropped the deployment priority (DP) rating, which was very much environment-specific and might not be all that useful for non-default installations. Instead, they are now providing an exploitability index (XI), which ranges from zero to three. With zero denoting active exploitation and three denoting that
Talos
Microsoft Patch Tuesday for December 2014: Light Month, Some Changes
blogs_talos·2014-12-09·CVSS 5.0
[MEDIUM] Microsoft Patch Tuesday for December 2014: Light Month, Some Changes
This post was authored by Yves Younan.
Today, Microsoft is releasing their final Update Tuesday of 2014. Last year, the end of year update was relatively large. This time, it’s relatively light with a total of seven bulletins, covering 24 CVEs. Three of those bulletins are rated critical and four are considered to be important. Microsoft has made a few changes to the way they report their bulletins. Microsoft has dropped the deployment priority (DP) rating, which was very much environment-specific and might not be all that useful for non-default installations. Instead, they are now providing an exploitability index (XI), which ranges from zero to three. With zero denoting active exploitation and three denoting that it’s unlikely that the vulnerability would be exploited. Another change is
2014-12-11
Published