Hi, it’s Will. Recently, a blog author reported that the CERT® Secure Coding Standards website, which runs on Atlassian Confluence, contained a SQL injection vulnerability. After analyzing the report and discussing it with the Confluence vendor, we have concluded that the behavior described is not a vulnerability.
My previous blog article was intended to highlight two new features observed in a number of phishing kits that held the aim of making the lives of security analysts more difficult. I want to now focus my attention on another trick that has been used in phishing kits in order to protect the attack against a technique called “dilution.”
The most infected countries are:
Germany: 4.64%
Hungary: 3.73%
Poland: 1.49%
France: 1.42%
Belgium: 1.28%
Type: Vulnerability. Microsoft Windows is prone to a remote code-execution vulnerability; fixes are available.
Phishing is a way for individuals who are known as “phishers” to obtain your private information such as bank account details and passwords. Phishing messages come in the form of an email message that is directed to you and appears to be from a reputable company or business-often one that you have an association with

