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{ LATEST NEWS }


MICROSOFT PLAYREADY SECURITY RESEARCH

Security Explorations conducted security analysis of Microsoft Play Ready
content protection technology in the environment of CANAL+ SAT TV provider. As a
result, complete access to movie assets and content keys available in CANAL+ VOD
library could be gained with the use of a fake client device identity. (...)

15 Aug. 2022
read more


SECURITY EXPLORATIONS BECOMES A SECURITY RESEARCH LAB

Security Explorations becomes a security research laboratory of AG Security
Research company.

27 Jul. 2022


GEMALTO JAVA SIM CARDS RESEARCH

Security Explorations discovers over-the-air applet loading vulnerability in
Gemalto SIM card. The company makes a call for sponsors concerned about security
of Gemalto solutions and willing to provide support for an independent security
analysis of Gemalto Java SIM cards. (...)

15 Apr. 2019
read more
Go to newsroom


{ FEATURED ON }




{ RESEARCH }

"Reuters reports that Adam Gowdiak, Java security expert at Security
Explorations, says Oracle's update leaves "several critical security flaws"
unfixed. "We don't dare to tell users that it's safe to enable Java again,"
Gowdiak told Reuters."

Read now in CBC News

"Oracle issued an emergency fix today for vulnerabilities in its Java software
about four months after Security Explorations, a security firm, warned the
company about the bugs. The delay in providing a fix allowed more than 100,000
computers to get hacked, security firm FireEye estimated. So why did it take
this long to provide a patch?"

Read now in Bloomberg

"(…) security researchers at the Polish firm Security Explorations revealed
another critical security flaw in Java that affects users of every browser that
runs the plugin, including Chrome, Firefox, Safari and Internet Explorer,
allowing a malicious hackers to gain complete control of a victim's machine
through a rigged website."

Read now in Forbes

"A new zero-day exploit in multiple versions of Java puts roughly 1 billion
users at risk to attackers and malicious code. The flaw was discovered by
researchers at Poland's Security Explorations, a security firm that already has
a known penchant for unearthing flaws in Java's notoriously buggy programming
language."

Read now in NBC News

"Serious vulnerabilities exist in Google App Engine (GAE), a cloud service for
developing and hosting Web applications, a team of security researchers has
found.The vulnerabilities could allow an attacker to escape from the Java
Virtual Machine security sandbox and execute code on the underlying system,
according to researchers from Security Explorations, a Polish security firm that
found many vulnerabilities in Java over the past few years."

Read now in PC World

"Security Explorations earlier this month also notified IBM of 17 Java-related
security issues in its products, 10 of which "successfully demonstrate a
complete IBM J9 Java VM security sandbox bypass," said Gowdiak. The security
issues are present in the IBM software development kit (SDK), which is a Java
Standard Edition implementation from IBM that's available for a number of
platforms (…)"

Read now in Dark Reading

"Reuters reports that Adam Gowdiak, Java security expert at Security
Explorations, says Oracle's update leaves "several critical security flaws"
unfixed. "We don't dare to tell users that it's safe to enable Java again,"
Gowdiak told Reuters."

Read now in CBC News

"Oracle issued an emergency fix today for vulnerabilities in its Java software
about four months after Security Explorations, a security firm, warned the
company about the bugs. The delay in providing a fix allowed more than 100,000
computers to get hacked, security firm FireEye estimated. So why did it take
this long to provide a patch?"

Read now in Bloomberg

"(…) security researchers at the Polish firm Security Explorations revealed
another critical security flaw in Java that affects users of every browser that
runs the plugin, including Chrome, Firefox, Safari and Internet Explorer,
allowing a malicious hackers to gain complete control of a victim's machine
through a rigged website."

Read now in Forbes

"A new zero-day exploit in multiple versions of Java puts roughly 1 billion
users at risk to attackers and malicious code. The flaw was discovered by
researchers at Poland's Security Explorations, a security firm that already has
a known penchant for unearthing flaws in Java's notoriously buggy programming
language."

Read now in NBC News

"Serious vulnerabilities exist in Google App Engine (GAE), a cloud service for
developing and hosting Web applications, a team of security researchers has
found.The vulnerabilities could allow an attacker to escape from the Java
Virtual Machine security sandbox and execute code on the underlying system,
according to researchers from Security Explorations, a Polish security firm that
found many vulnerabilities in Java over the past few years."

Read now in PC World

"Security Explorations earlier this month also notified IBM of 17 Java-related
security issues in its products, 10 of which "successfully demonstrate a
complete IBM J9 Java VM security sandbox bypass," said Gowdiak. The security
issues are present in the IBM software development kit (SDK), which is a Java
Standard Edition implementation from IBM that's available for a number of
platforms (…)"

Read now in Dark Reading

"Reuters reports that Adam Gowdiak, Java security expert at Security
Explorations, says Oracle's update leaves "several critical security flaws"
unfixed. "We don't dare to tell users that it's safe to enable Java again,"
Gowdiak told Reuters."

Read now in CBC News

"Oracle issued an emergency fix today for vulnerabilities in its Java software
about four months after Security Explorations, a security firm, warned the
company about the bugs. The delay in providing a fix allowed more than 100,000
computers to get hacked, security firm FireEye estimated. So why did it take
this long to provide a patch?"

Read now in Bloomberg

View our projects


FACTS AND
FIGURES


~100

UNCOVERED JAVA
SECURITY ISSUES


~100 000$

IN REWARDS FOR A PROJECT
TARGETING GOOGLE APP
ENGINE


NO. 1

ARGUS HACKING CONTEST
CO-WINNER


>200

FEATURED OVER 200 TIMES
IN VARIOUS PUBLICATIONS

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