Author Archive: Josh Kebbel-Wyen

Security update released for Adobe Photoshop CS6 (APSB12-20)

Today, a Security Bulletin (APSB12-20) has been posted in regards to a security update for Adobe Photoshop CS6 (13.0) for Windows and Macintosh. Adobe recommends that users apply the update for their product installation.

This posting is provided “AS IS” with no warranties and confers no rights.

Adobe Security Bulletins Posted

Today, we released the following Security Bulletins:

Customers of the affected products should consult the relevant Security Bulletin(s) for details.

This posting is provided “AS IS” with no warranties and confers no rights.

Security Bulletin – Security update available for Adobe Flash Media Server (FMS)

Today, we posted a Security Bulletin to address critical security issues in Adobe Flash Media Server.  Adobe recommends Flash Media Server customers follow security best practices and update their product installations to the latest version of Flash Media Server (version 4.0.1, 3.5.5 or 3.0.7 respectively).

This posting is provided “AS IS” with no warranties and confers no rights.

Security update available for Adobe Flash Player

Today, a Security Bulletin has been posted to address a critical security issue (CVE-2010-2884) in Adobe Flash Player. This Security Bulletin affects Adobe Flash Player 10.1.82.76 and earlier versions for Windows, Macintosh, Linux, and Solaris, and Adobe Flash Player 10.1.92.10 for Android.  Adobe recommends users apply the update for their product installation. This addresses the issue first mentioned in Security Advisory APSA10-03.

This posting is provided “AS IS” with no warranties and confers no rights.

CanSecWest 2008 Pwn2Own Contest

On Friday March 28, 2008 during the CanSecWest 2008 security conference Shane Macaulay of Security Objectives uncovered a potential security issue with Flash Player. Adobe Product Incident Response Team (PSIRT) received information regarding the exploit from TippingPoint, who sponsored the contest, on Friday evening. After some internal investigation, we found that via our ongoing response and security testing process we were aware of the issue and had fixed it for our security update coming in the next Flash Player update later this month.
What should I do as a customer?
We have fixed the issue and it will be in our next update coming later this month. Adobe is not aware of any active exploits in wild. The security researchers have reported the information to us responsibly giving the Flash Player team time to investigate and deliver a patch to you. We will provide more information as it becomes available.
*This posting is provided “AS IS” with no warranties, and confers no rights.*