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Fedora 41: vaultwarden 2025-5f07738947 Security Advisory Updates

Feb23
by Ike on February 23, 2025 at 2:41 am
Posted In: Fedora Linux Distribution - Security Advisories

Fedora 41: vaultwarden 2025-5f07738947 Security Advisory Updates

update to 1.33.2 fix CVE-2025-24898

└ Tags: Fedora Linux Distribution - Security Advisories
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Fedora 41: python3.8 2025-bec494726c Security Advisory Updates

Feb23
by Ike on February 23, 2025 at 2:15 am
Posted In: Fedora Linux Distribution - Security Advisories

Fedora 41: python3.8 2025-bec494726c Security Advisory Updates

Security fixes for CVE-2024-11168 and CVE-2025-0938

└ Tags: Fedora Linux Distribution - Security Advisories
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Shaping Tomorrow at WordCamp Asia 2025

Feb22
by Ike on February 22, 2025 at 3:04 pm
Posted In: Backups, CMS, Events, PHP, Releases, security, WordCamp, Wordpress
WordCamp Asia 2025 attendees gathered for a group photo

Over 1,400 attendees from 71 countries gathered at the Philippine International Convention Center in Manila, and nearly 15,000 more joined online, for WordCamp Asia 2025.

It’s the people. It’s the friendships and the stories.

Matt Mullenweg, WordPress Cofounder

The flagship WordPress event started with a dedicated Contributor Day, followed by two days of engaging talks, panels, hands-on workshops, and networking. Notable guests included WordPress Cofounder Matt Mullenweg and Gutenberg Lead Architect Matías Ventura, who were joined by a diverse lineup of speakers and panelists.

Throughout the event, the sponsor hall buzzed with activity as companies from across the WordPress ecosystem showcased their latest products, engaged with attendees, and offered live demos and giveaways. Each day, attendees refueled with diverse food offerings featuring Filipino favorites, turning meals into a prime networking opportunity where new connections were made and ideas were exchanged.

New Ways to Engage

This year’s event introduced several new programs to the schedule:

  • Solutions Spotlight—a series of dynamic 10-minute lightning talks that gave an inside look at innovative products, cutting-edge strategies, and real-world solutions from top-tier sponsors, all designed to help attendees succeed in the WordPress ecosystem. These fast-paced sessions offered a unique opportunity to discover how leading brands are solving challenges, empowering users, and shaping the future of WordPress.
  • YouthCamp, a dedicated event for kids and teens ages 8-17, offered a full day of free, hands-on sessions designed to spark creativity and introduce the world of WordPress and open source. Through interactive workshops covering web basics, design, and development, participants gained practical skills while exploring the power of building online. 
  • The new Career and Social Corners enhanced networking, fostered meaningful connections, and created new opportunities for those within the WordPress community. Career Corner was the go-to space for attendees exploring career opportunities, connecting with sponsors, and discovering exciting new roles. Meanwhile, Social Corner offered a relaxed, lounge-style environment where attendees could engage in informal discussions over refreshments.

Contributor Day

WordCamp Asia kicked off with an incredible Contributor Day, bringing together almost 800 contributors, many of them new, to collaborate, share knowledge, and give back to WordPress. With 37 dedicated table leads and 16 experts from the Human Library guiding the way, participants of all experience levels engaged in meaningful discussions, tackled important tasks, and made a lasting impact on the WordPress project.

Key contributions included resolving a critical media bug, advancing vertical text editing in Gutenberg, and refining the editing experience with dozens of issue closures. Performance optimizations and accessibility improvements abounded, joined by seven fresh patterns, and over 4,000 newly translated strings.

New tools and workflows were explored to enhance testing and development. The day also saw meaningful conversations between hosting providers and users, improvements to event organizing processes, and hands-on training.

With innovative ideas, new faces, and significant progress across multiple areas, Contributor Day reinforced the spirit of open source collaboration that drives WordPress forward.

The Future is WordPress

On the first full conference day, attendees gathered to celebrate the power of open source collaboration and innovation. Opening remarks from global and local event leads reflected on the incredible journey of WordCamp Asia, tracing its roots back to the first Southeast Asian WordCamp in Manila in 2008. This full-circle moment underscored how the WordPress community has flourished over the years, driven by shared knowledge and a commitment to an open web. The excitement continued with a highly anticipated opening keynote from Matías Ventura, who shared insights into the future of Gutenberg and WordPress, inspiring attendees to embrace the next wave of innovation and creativity in content publishing.

The day then began in earnest. Talks highlighted new ways to integrate WordPress with external applications, opening possibilities for more interactive and scalable digital experiences. Simultaneously, content strategists and marketers explored evolving best practices in SEO, learning how to optimize their sites for visibility, engagement, and long-term growth. These sessions emphasized the importance of adaptability in a constantly evolving digital landscape, ensuring that WordPress users stay ahead of industry trends.

Workshops throughout the day provided hands-on learning experiences tailored to a wide range of skill levels. Developers refined their expertise, gaining practical knowledge they could apply to their own projects. Accessibility advocates led discussions on designing for inclusivity, showcasing strategies to make WordPress-powered websites more navigable and user-friendly for people of all abilities.

As the conference continued into the afternoon, conversations expanded to performance optimization and emerging technologies shaping the future of WordPress. A dedicated session explored AI-driven workflows, demonstrating how artificial intelligence can enhance site performance, automate repetitive tasks, and create more personalized user experiences. These discussions showcased the evolving role of WordPress as a versatile platform that extends beyond traditional publishing.

The first day culminated in a thought-provoking keynote panel, WordPress in 2030, where industry leaders explored the future of the platform. The discussion covered the expanding open source community, emerging technologies, and the role of education and mentorship. Panelists shared their perspectives on the opportunities and challenges ahead, encouraging attendees to actively shape the future of WordPress by contributing, innovating, and advocating for an open web.

Panelists Noel Tock, Hong Phuc Dang, Jon Ang, Courtney Robertson, and Raquel Manriquez discuss WordPress in 2030

Returning for the final day of WordCamp Asia 2025, attendees explored a new set of sessions designed to push the boundaries of web development and strategy. Technical discussions on advanced Gutenberg block development highlighted innovative ways to build more dynamic and interactive content experiences, while another session examined performance optimization strategies to enhance site speed, accessibility, and overall user engagement. Content creators and marketers gained valuable insights into audience growth, effective storytelling, and data-driven content strategies to maximize impact.

The final sessions of the conference reinforced WordPress’s adaptability and innovation, equipping attendees with new skills and strategies.

Q&A

As the final day drew to a close, Matt shared historic photos from WordCamp Davao 2008 in the Philippines, and then answered questions from the audience.

Questions covered a variety of topics, incluiding: publishing on the open web, AI, headless WordPress, education, and Matt’s personal motivations. It was clear throughout the Q&A that the future of WordPress is as bright as the island-themed attire at the event’s after-party.

Closing

Thank you to all the hard-working organizers who made this event possible, the speakers who took the stage, the visitors who ventured to Manila, and everyone who tuned in from around the world. Our hope is that every WordCamp attendee leaves with new knowledge, new friends, and new inspiration to build a better web.

Be sure to mark your calendars for other major WordPress events in 2025: WordCamp Europe (Basel, Switzerland) and WordCamp US (Portland, Oregon, USA). Then join us in Mumbai, India for WordCamp Asia 2026!

└ Tags: Events, WordCamp

Fedora 40: chromium 2025-c0c371a0b6 Security Advisory Updates

Feb22
by Ike on February 22, 2025 at 1:47 am
Posted In: Fedora Linux Distribution - Security Advisories

Fedora 40: chromium 2025-c0c371a0b6 Security Advisory Updates

Update to 133.0.6943.126 CVE-2025-0999: Heap buffer overflow in V8 CVE-2025-1426: Heap buffer overflow in GPU CVE-2025-1006: Use after free in Network

└ Tags: Fedora Linux Distribution - Security Advisories
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Fedora 40: proftpd 2025-d37ad923f5 Security Advisory Updates

Feb22
by Ike on February 22, 2025 at 1:41 am
Posted In: Fedora Linux Distribution - Security Advisories

Fedora 40: proftpd 2025-d37ad923f5 Security Advisory Updates

This update addresses a null pointer dereferencing issue that could cause the session for a client that sent specially-crafted commands to the server to crash (not the sessions of other clients).

└ Tags: Fedora Linux Distribution - Security Advisories
 Comment 
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What’s New?

  • Fedora 42: Advisory for golang-github-alecthomas-chroma-2 CVE-2025-58185
  • Fedora 42: golang-github-jwt Important Rebuild for CVE-2025-61723
  • Fedora 43: duc Critical Fix for Stack Overflow CVE-2025-13654
  • Fedora 43: fluidSynth Race Condition Vulnerability CVE-2025-68617 Exploit
  • Fedora 43: gdu Critical Update for CVE-2025-58189 and More
  • Fedora 43: tkimg Critical Libpng Libtiff Vulnerabilities 2025-13b23a6952
  • Fedora 42: singularity-ce 4.3.6 Upgrade Security Advisory 2025-3ff2f4efe3
  • Fedora 43: singularity-ce Upgrade for CVE-2025-67499 Security Issue
  • Fedora 42: ov Critical Info Leak Fixed in 0.50.2 FEDORA-2025-9ded4c3651
  • Fedora 42: docker-buildkit Update CVE-2024-25621 Important Fixes
  • Fedora 42: roundcubemail Important XSS Fix with Advisory ID 2025-fec36f9eaf
  • Fedora 42: Fix for Critical 7-Zip Remote Code Execution in RetroArch
  • Fedora 42: mingw-libsoup Critical Out-of-Bounds Read CVE-2025-11021
  • Fedora 42: mingw-python3 Critical Denial Service Fix CVE-2025-12084
  • Fedora 42: Fix for Important Integer Overflow Vulnerability in mingw-glib2
  • Fedora 43: mingw-libsoup Security Update for CVE-2025-11021 Advisory
  • Fedora 42 pgadmin4 Critical Remote Code Exec Fix 2025-b08763f674
  • Fedora: Gobuster Critical Update Released for CVE-2025-58188 Advisory
  • Debian: Rails Severe Command Manipulation DSA-6090-2 CVE-2025-24294
  • Debian Trixie WordPress Security Advisory DSA-6091-1 for CVE-2025-58246
  • Debian: Chromium Important Code Exec and Info Disclosure DSA-6089-1
  • Debian Trixie: php8.4 Important DoS Memory Disclosure DSA-6088-1
  • Fedora 42: uriparser CVE-2025-67899 Fix for Unbounded Recursion Issue
  • Fedora 42: util-linux Critical Buffer Overflow CVE-2025-14104 Advisory
  • Fedora 42: mqttcli Update 0.2.8 Critical Integer Overflow Issues

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