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Adobe Acrobat Reader is many users’ favorite PDF reader, and it’s been around for many years. However, it’s not without its fair share of issues. These problems originate primarily from the ...
Adobe's Acrobat and Acrobat Reader packages are currently under attack from a JavaScript-based exploit, similar to one which afflicted the software back in June.
Make sure that you have Adobe Acrobat Reader 8 or higher or Foxit Reader installed on your system When prompted to open or save the form, select the down arrow on the “Save” button, and select ”Save ...
Adobe recently released a blacklisting framework that enables users to stop JavaScript from calling some APIs. This video gives users a walk-through of how to define which APIs they want to ...
Disable JavaScript now According to an advisory from Adobe, the critical vulnerability exists in Adobe Reader and Acrobat 9.2 and earlier versions. It is being exploited in the wild.
Adobe, although they have admitted to the flaw, has not given a time line for fixing the affected applications with include Acrobat (Reader as well) 9.1, 8.1.4, 7.1.1 and earlier.
Adobe acknowledged that all versions of Reader and Acrobat contain at least one critical vulnerability.
A cybersecurity researcher is urging users to upgrade Adobe Acrobat Reader after a fix was released yesterday for a remote code execution zero-day with a public in-the-wild proof-of-concept exploit.
If nothing else, JavaScript should be disabled by default in Adobe Reader.” Henceforth, Sophos has recommended all users to disable JavaScript in Adobe Acrobat and Reader by default.
Adobe Acrobat 6.0 is an indispensable upgrade for any serious Acrobat user. But individual users should look for a cheaper option.