News

Oracle plans to make changes to strengthen the security of Java, including fixing its certificate revocation checking feature, preventing unsigned applets from being executed by default and adding ...
Last February, Oracle released a fix for a targeted vulnerability identified as CVE-2012-0507 and included it in an update for the Windows version of Java.
A statement by an Oracle executive affirms that Java 7 and updates to it should continue to work on Windows XP. Java 8 is a different story.
Oracle's Java plugin for browsers is a notoriously insecure product. Over the past 18 months, the company has released 11 updates, six of them containing critical security fixes. With each update ...
Analyst Gartner has warned that new changes to Java licensing has meant Oracle will actively target organisations, even those who do not run any Oracle products, on Java compliance. Gartner ...
BURLINGAME, Calif. -- The Java computing language has finally proven to be the money-maker that Sun Microsystems always insisted it would be. Everyone, except perhaps Oracle shareholders, should ...
Oracle is taking the final step to rid the web of its terrible Java browser plugin. While the plugin started off life back in the ‘90s as an innocent way to bring app-like features to browsers ...
The fees Oracle charges range from $40 to $300 per user, or from $5,000 to $15,000 per processor on the computer running the software, Clarke reports. Oracle isn't alone in using audits.
Java 18 is supported under the NFTC up to January 2024, while the free support is only available on Java 17 if organisations are on Oracle JDK releases prior to version 17.0.13.
One of the reasons why Oracle Developer is crashing on your computer is because Oracle JDK is not installed on your computer. Therefore, we need to install Oracle JDK and set it up, to do so ...
The Raspberry Pi Foundation has this week announced the newly added support for Oracle’s Java by the awesome Raspberry Pi $35 mini PC. The Raspberry Pi can now enjoy the addition of the official ...
"The evidence against Oracle is overwhelming," Bott wrote, continuing: When you use Java’s automatic updater to install crucial security updates for Windows, third-party software is always included.