Are all Linux vendor kernels insecure? A new study says yes, but there's a fix
All vendor kernels are plagued with security vulnerabilities, according to a CIQ whitepaper. Will the Linux community ever accept upstream stable kernels?
All vendor kernels are plagued with security vulnerabilities, according to a CIQ whitepaper. Will the Linux community ever accept upstream stable kernels?
The recently released Linux 6.9 kernel brings several significant updates and improvements. Here are the most important ones.
In addition to unveiling RHEL 9.4, the company says it will support RHEL 7 for an extra four years.
Rolling out to Microsoft 365 work and school accounts, the new feature will let you use your files in OneDrive for the web even if you're offline.
I'm running Canonical's latest release - aka 'Noble Numbat' - and find this distro's performance and security improvements make it an outstanding OS for everyone and every job.
Since February, there've been 800 newly assigned CVEs. Your job? Update your main Linux distro more often.
The six-year-old Linux kernel seemed doomed until this alliance of CIQ, Oracle, and SUSE stepped up. But why go to all this trouble?
Ubuntu's parent company - now powering millions of desktops, servers, and clouds - continues to seek the balance between delivering 'Linux for Human Beings' and embracing its responsibilities in the global tech market.
Collaborative innovation has been the group's driving force for a quarter of a century. Or, to paraphrase Lao Tzu, the journey of a thousand open-source programs starts with a single project.
This low-level software is the glue that enables Linux to run on Secure Boot PCs, and it has a nasty problem.