Fortinet FortiSwitch owners should be patching their gear ASAP as the company has released security patches for a critical vulnerability in FortiSwitch devices that can be exploited to change administrator passwords remotely.
You can find out more details here: PSIRT | FortiGuard Labs
Martin Jartelius, CISO at Outpost24 had this to say:
“There are a few rules of thumb. DO NOT expose administrative interfaces against the internet if you can avoid this. While this flaw allows a password change, for those who expose their devices against untrusted networks, the quality of passwords is also important, because already today there is the risk of attacks against weak password.”
“We help companies fight both those issues, password quality is the most user-centric, and EASM allows organizations to find those devices and fix the exposure – because exposure it risk, and vulnerability or not – if the attackers cannot reach the device you have substantially less of a stressful morning fixing this issue. Also praise to Fortinet who found, fixed, and disclosed the issue openly.”
This is one of these situations where you should drop what you are doing and patch everything ASAP. I say that because there are a lot of these devices online. Which means every single one is a target for threat actors.
The Number Of Lawsuits That Apple Is Dealing With Over The Apple Intelligence Debacle Is Now Up To Three
Posted in Commentary with tags Apple on April 10, 2025 by itnerdApple’s problems related to their shambolic Apple Intelligence rollout seems to be increasing. First there was this lawsuit in the US. Which was followed by this one in Canada. And now a new lawsuit filed in California that says this:
This action arises from Apple’s materially false and misleading statements relating to Apple’s artificial intelligence (“AI”) suite of features, branded as “Apple Intelligence”—in particular, promised AI enhancements to Siri, Apple’s software-based virtual assistant. The Siri AI makeover was the centerpiece of the promised Apple Intelligence platform and was touted by the Company in advertisements and other public statements in an effort to increase sales of the iPhone 16 and spur iPhone upgrades. Those promises were false and nearly a year after they were made, Siri’s touted “In-App” and “On-Screen” AI functions still do not exist.
This really smells like BatteryGate where Apple’s problems went from bad to worse until Apple was not only forced to make substantial changes to their software, but also they had to pay a lot of money to settle the multitude of lawsuits that were filed around the planet. My sense is this situation is heading in that same direction. Eventually. There’s been no comment from Apple as of yet. But you get the feeling that they will have to address this at some point.
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