Warning: Undefined array key "city" in /var/app/current/wp-content/themes/bestinternet_prod/header.php on line 56 Warning: Undefined array key "postal" in /var/app/current/wp-content/themes/bestinternet_prod/header.php on line 60 Warning: Undefined array key "country" in /var/app/current/wp-content/themes/bestinternet_prod/header.php on line 64 Warning: Undefined variable $org in /var/app/current/wp-content/themes/bestinternet_prod/header.php on line 70 Warning: Undefined variable $loc in /var/app/current/wp-content/themes/bestinternet_prod/header.php on line 78 Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type null in /var/app/current/wp-content/themes/bestinternet_prod/header.php on line 78 Warning: Undefined variable $loc in /var/app/current/wp-content/themes/bestinternet_prod/header.php on line 79 Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type null in /var/app/current/wp-content/themes/bestinternet_prod/header.php on line 79

How can you prepare for a zero-day attack

On Nov. 24, 2021, an Alibaba Cloud Security engineer noticed that a certain string of text, when inserted into Java’s logging utility Log4j, could execute remote code.

Cue the alarms, as vendors, security experts, and end-users spread the word about the hole in the massively used software, including US Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas.

Companies had no time—ahem, zero days—to fix the problem, as a race began between patch-makers and threat actors looking to exploit the open systems. The industry-wide distress signal aimed to prevent the zero-day vulnerability from becoming a zero-day attack. But what exactly is a zero-day attack?