Social Media: Separating the Personal from the Professional (Part 1)

Unless you’ve been living under a rock or not have had access to the Internet or living a life of a hermit or well you get the point, you would somehow or another would have had received an invite from a friend, family member, a classmate, a co-worker, an associate, an acquaintance or a complete stranger (hopefully, I covered everything) to join, follow, make friends with, connect with or link with him/her or check out his profile, photo, video or note in some greatest thing ever that happened in this thingamajig that they call the Internet.

Social Media has become a major phenomenon. It has spawned a whole new vocabulary of terms that will perhaps add several more pages into the Oxford (or Merriam-Webster’s) Dictionary. People are tweeting, Facebooking, tagging, liking, sharing, embedding and wall writing. Some are LIONs, some LIONs are also tweeting… And guess what, these Tweeting LIONs can even have their own channel… Imagine that…
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  • RSS From the National Vulnerability Database

    • CVE-2012-1090 (linux_kernel) May 16, 2012
      The cifs_lookup function in fs/cifs/dir.c in the Linux kernel before 3.2.10 allows local users to cause a denial of service (OOPS) via attempted access to a special file, as demonstrated by a FIFO. […]
      nvd@nist.gov
    • CVE-2012-2123 (linux_kernel) May 16, 2012
      The cap_bprm_set_creds function in security/commoncap.c in the Linux kernel before 3.3.3 does not properly handle the use of file system capabilities (aka fcaps) for implementing a privileged executable file, which allows local users to bypass intended personality restrictions via a crafted application, as demonstrated by an attack that uses a parent process […]
      nvd@nist.gov
    • CVE-2012-0044 (linux_kernel) May 16, 2012
      Integer overflow in the drm_mode_dirtyfb_ioctl function in drivers/gpu/drm/drm_crtc.c in the Direct Rendering Manager (DRM) subsystem in the Linux kernel before 3.1.5 allows local users to gain privileges or cause a denial of service (memory corruption) via a crafted ioctl call. […]
      nvd@nist.gov
    • CVE-2012-2121 (linux_kernel) May 16, 2012
      The KVM implementation in the Linux kernel before 3.3.4 does not properly manage the relationships between memory slots and the iommu, which allows guest OS users to cause a denial of service (host OS crash) by leveraging administrative access to the guest OS to conduct hotunplug and hotplug operations on devices. […]
      nvd@nist.gov
    • CVE-2012-0207 (linux_kernel) May 16, 2012
      The igmp_heard_query function in net/ipv4/igmp.c in the Linux kernel before 3.2.1 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (divide-by-zero error and panic) via IGMP packets. […]
      nvd@nist.gov
    • CVE-2012-1601 (linux_kernel) May 16, 2012
      The KVM implementation in the Linux kernel before 3.3.6 allows host OS users to cause a denial of service (NULL pointer dereference and host OS crash) by making a KVM_CREATE_IRQCHIP ioctl call after a virtual CPU already exists. […]
      nvd@nist.gov
    • CVE-2011-4621 (linux_kernel) May 16, 2012
      The Linux kernel before 2.6.37 does not properly implement a certain clock-update optimization, which allows local users to cause a denial of service (system hang) via an application that executes code in a loop. […]
      nvd@nist.gov
    • CVE-2012-1179 (linux_kernel) May 16, 2012
      The Linux kernel before 3.3.1, when KVM is used, allows guest OS users to cause a denial of service (host OS crash) by leveraging administrative access to the guest OS, related to the pmd_none_or_clear_bad function and page faults for huge pages. […]
      nvd@nist.gov
    • CVE-2012-0879 (linux_kernel) May 16, 2012
      The I/O implementation for block devices in the Linux kernel before 2.6.33 does not properly handle the CLONE_IO feature, which allows local users to cause a denial of service (I/O instability) by starting multiple processes that share an I/O context. […]
      nvd@nist.gov
    • CVE-2012-1146 (linux_kernel) May 16, 2012
      The mem_cgroup_usage_unregister_event function in mm/memcontrol.c in the Linux kernel before 3.2.10 does not properly handle multiple events that are attached to the same eventfd, which allows local users to cause a denial of service (NULL pointer dereference and system crash) or possibly have unspecified other impact by registering memory threshold events. […]
      nvd@nist.gov
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