Oracle will be required to provide users with a mechanism to uninstall older and vulnerable versions of Java, following a settlement with the Federal Trade Commission ...
Oracle received a public slap on the wrist from the US Federal Trade Commission over Java SE, the desktop runtime for Java. The FTC announced today that it had reached a settlement with Oracle ...
Oracle Corp. has agreed to overhaul its Java security update process to settle Federal Trade Commission (FTC) charges that the company deceived consumers by not informing them that the updates left ...
Oracle has reached a settlement with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission over charges related to Java Software updates and security. The problem that the FTC had with Oracle’s Java updates is that the ...
Security issues have long bedeviled users of Oracle’s Java SE, and on Monday the FTC’s efforts to address the problem finally came to fruition. Oracle has agreed to settle charges that it deceived ...
Yesterday the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) announced that Oracle has agreed to settle charges that it deceived consumers about the security provided by updates to its Java Platform, Standard Edition ...
Oracle promises to give customers tools that easily uninstall insecure older versions of Java SE that may still lurk as vulnerabilities within Web browsers. That promise comes in a consent decree with ...
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) announced that Oracle has agreed to settle a case over deception charges related to Java Standard Edition software updates. Oracle acquired Java in 2010 and the ...
The FTC just issued a press release that took Oracle to task for what it says is the company's role in leaving up to 850 million PCs susceptible to hacker attacks. The FTC says the software giant ...
The FTC says Oracle hasn't been uninstalling older, insecure versions of Java. It's time for users to ditch client-side Java altogether When it comes to Java, some things never change. Consider the ...