Search references for SHELLSHOCK SOFTWARE-BUG. Phrases containing SHELLSHOCK SOFTWARE-BUG
See searches and references containing SHELLSHOCK SOFTWARE-BUG!SHELLSHOCK SOFTWARE-BUG
Security bug in the GNU Bash shell discovered in 2014
Shellshock, also known as Bashdoor, is a family of security bugs in the GNU Bash shell, the first of which was disclosed on 24 September 2014. Shellshock
Shellshock_(software_bug)
Computer bug exploit caused by invalid data
vulnerability Gadget (machine instruction sequence) Prompt injection Shellshock (software bug) SQL injection Unintended instructions "Top 10 Web Application
Code_injection
Automated software testing technique
'Shellshock' Software Bug in Bash to Be Significant". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 September 2014. Zalewski, Michał (1 October 2014). "Bash bug: the
Fuzzing
2014 computer malware
original version in 2014 exploited a flaw in the Bash shell - the Shellshock software bug - to exploit devices running BusyBox, with Bash installed as an
BASHLITE
April 2016. Retrieved 25 July 2016. "Security experts expect 'Shellshock' software bug to be significant". The Times of India. Archived from the original
Core Infrastructure Initiative
Core_Infrastructure_Initiative
Topics referred to by the same term
amine film Pokémon: The First Movie Shellshock (software bug), a security hole in the Bash computer shell Shellshock (wildlife protection organisation)
Shellshock
GNU replacement for the Bourne shell
Perlroth, Nicole (25 September 2014). "Security Experts Expect 'Shellshock' Software Bug in Bash to Be Significant". The New York Times. Archived from the
Bash_(Unix_shell)
Information security awards
Rigo‘s research presentation at SyScan 2015) Most Overhyped Bug: Shellshock (software bug), Stephane Chazelas Most Epic FAIL: OPM - U.S. Office of Personnel
Pwnie_Awards
Perlroth, Nicole (25 September 2014). "Security Experts Expect 'Shellshock' Software Bug in Bash to Be Significant". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 September
2014_in_science
Process to maintain system integrity across patches
must be fixed within 24 hours. Ventura, Jeremy (August 9, 2023). "Why Shellshock Remains a Cybersecurity Threat After 9 Years". Dark Reading (Commentary)
Patch_management
Glenn (July 1995). "Bug!". Videogame Advisor. Vol. 1, no. 3. Cyberactive Publications, Inc. p. 29. Guise, Tom (September 1995). "Bug!" (PDF). Sega Magazine
List_of_Sega_Saturn_games
Interface between Web servers and external programs
widespread and led to a number of security advisories in early 1996. The Bash 'Shellshock' vulnerability permits execution of data injected into environment variables
Common_Gateway_Interface
Performances by American voice actor
2014. Retrieved September 30, 2014. Guerrilla Games (September 3, 2004). Shellshock: Nam '67. Eidos Interactive. Scene: Closing credits, 2:09 in, Voice Talent
Dee_Bradley_Baker_filmography
Malware that affects the Linux operating system
October 2016. Liam Tung (25 September 2014). "First attacks using shellshock Bash bug discovered". ZDNet. Archived from the original on 21 December 2014
Linux_malware
Security bug
Microsoft. Unlike other high-profile vulnerabilities like Heartbleed, Shellshock, Gotofail and POODLE, JASBUG was a design problem, not an implementation
JASBUG
Retrieved 22 February 2021. "SHELLSHOCK NAM67". Australian Classification. 22 June 2004. Retrieved 22 February 2021. "SHELLSHOCK NAM67". Australian Classification
List of banned video games in Australia
List_of_banned_video_games_in_Australia
the Xbox and Xbox 360. Instead backward compatibility was achieved using software emulation. When the Xbox 360 launched in North America 212 Xbox games were
List of Xbox games compatible with Xbox 360
List_of_Xbox_games_compatible_with_Xbox_360
and to date, no ports of the game have ever been released. Sega Sega Shellshock Originally scheduled for release in 1995 for the 32X and PC platforms
List_of_cancelled_32X_games
Grasshopper Manufacture PS3, X360, WIN, PS4, PS5, XOne, XSX/S, NX 2011-06-21 Shellshock: Nam '67 Guerrilla Games WIN, PS2, XB 2004-09-03 Shield, The Point of
List_of_third-person_shooters
He was once an agent of the Psycho-Man. Live Wire later teamed up with Shellshock, another former agent of the Psycho-Man. Live Wire frees the Circus of
List of Marvel Comics characters: L
List_of_Marvel_Comics_characters:_L
SHELLSHOCK SOFTWARE-BUG
SHELLSHOCK SOFTWARE-BUG
Girl/Female
Arabic
Bug
Surname or Lastname
English
English : of uncertain derivation. Reaney suggests it may be from Middle English bugee, buggye ‘lambskin’, and hence probably a metonymic occupational name for someone who prepared such skins.
Male
Norse
Usually said to be an Anglicized form of Old Norse Fenrisúlfr, but according to Sophus Bugge, author of The Home of The Eddic Poems, this name, as well as Fenrir, probably originated with Norsemen under the influence of Christianity, and was a word for "hell" and only later took on the FENRIS means "swamp."Â
Surname or Lastname
Scandinavian
Scandinavian : habitational name from a place so named in Denmark.Scandinavian : from the old Danish personal names Buggi or Bukki, short forms of various German compound names.English : variant spelling of Bugg.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of several places called Bowden or Bowdon. Bowden in Devon and Derbyshire and Bowdon in Cheshire are named with Old English boga ‘bow’ + dūn ‘hill’, i.e. ‘hill shaped like a bow’; one in Leicestershire (Bugedone in Domesday Book) comes, according to Ekwall, from the Old English personal name Būga (masculine) or Bucge (feminine) + dūn. There are also Scottish places of this name, but there are comparatively few bearers of the surname Bowden north of the border.English : habitational name from Bovingdon, Hertfordshire, so named with the Old English phrase būfan dūne ‘on, upon the hill’. The surname may also have arisen as a topographic name from the same phrase used independently, for someone who lived at the top of a hill.Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Buadáin ‘descendant of Buadán’, an Old Irish personal name.
Male
Norse
In mythology, this is the name of a wolf, the son of Loki and the giantess Angrboða, popularly translated "swamp wolf," but probably originally FENRISÚLFR means "wolf of hell." According to Sophus Bugge, author of The Home of The Eddic Poems, this name cannot possibly mean "swamp wolf," for there does not exist in Old Norse any derivative endings as -rir, or -ris. He believes Fenrir and Fenris arose under the influence of Christian conceptions of the devil as lupus infernus, combined with tales of the Behemoth and the beast of the Apocalypse, and was altered in form in accordance with popular Old Norse etymology. He compares Old Norse fern from Latin infernus to Old Saxon fern which was derived from Latin infernum, and explains that Fenrir and Fenris must have been formed from *Fernir from fern using the endings -ir and gen. -is, both of which were very much used in mythical names, including names of giants. He goes on to explain that the later connection with fen ("fen, swamp, mire") was natural, for hell and lower regions, such as the abyss, are often connected by imagination just as they still are today.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from Middle English boggish ‘boastful’, ‘haughty’ (a word of unknown origin, perhaps akin to Germanic bag and bug, with the literal meaning ‘swollen’, ‘puffed up’). The name (in the forms Boge(y)s, Boga(y)s) is found in the 12th century in Yorkshire and East Anglia, and also around Bordeaux, which had trading links with East Anglia.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname for an uncouth or weird man, from Middle English bugge ‘hobgoblin’, ‘scarecrow’ (perhaps from Welsh bwg ‘ghost’). Compare Bogle 1.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name, common in Lancashire and Yorkshire, from Buglawton or Church Lawton in Cheshire, or Lawton in Herefordshire, named in Old English as ‘settlement on or near a hill’, or ‘settlement by a burial mound’, from hlÄw ‘hill’, ‘burial mound’ + tÅ«n ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’.English : variant spelling of Laughton.
Surname or Lastname
English (East Anglia)
English (East Anglia) : nickname from Middle English wigge ‘beetle’, ‘bug’.English (East Anglia) : metonymic occupational name for a maker of fancy breads baked in rounds and then divided up into wedge-shaped slices, Middle English wigge, from Middle Dutch wigge ‘wedge(-shaped cake)’.
Female
Japanese
(è›) Japanese name HOTARU means "firefly; lightning bug."
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly Devon and Cornwall)
English (mainly Devon and Cornwall) : nickname from Norman French buge ‘mouth’ (Late Latin bucca), applied either to someone with a large or misshapen mouth or to someone who made excessive use of his mouth, i.e. a garrulous, indiscreet, or gluttonous person. The word is also recorded in Middle English in the sense ‘victuals supplied for retainers on a military campaign’, and the surname may therefore also have arisen as a metonymic occupational name for a medieval quartermaster.Scottish (Caithness and Orkney) : unexplained.
Boy/Male
Arabic
Bug
Boy/Male
Bengali, Hindu, Indian
Offer to God; Bug
Male
Norse
Usually said to be an Anglicized form of Old Norse Fenrisúlfr, but according to Sophus Bugge, author of The Home of The Eddic Poems, this name, as well as Fenris, probably originated with Norsemen under the influence of Christianity, and was a word for "hell" and only later took on the FENRIR means "swamp."
Girl/Female
British, English
Cute
Surname or Lastname
English (Bedfordshire)
English (Bedfordshire) : nickname for someone disfigured by a lump or hump, from a diminutive of Old French bugne ‘swelling’, ‘protuberance’. The term bugnon was also applied to a kind of puffed-up fruit tart, and so the surname may also have been a metonymic occupational name for a baker of these.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Bugg.
Surname or Lastname
Catalan
Catalan : nickname for a bald man, equivalent to Spanish Cabello.English : variant spelling of Cable.Possibly a respelling of German Göbel (see Goebel) or Kabel.William Cabell, of Bugley near Warminster, in Wiltshire, England, trained in surgery and migrated to Virginia in the 18th century. The emigrant ancestor of a distinguished VA family, he married in 1726 and by 1741 had carried settlements 50 miles westward. As a pioneer during VA’s westward push, the surgeon had a private hospital from which he handed out medicines and wooden legs crafted by his artisans.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Bugby, a Northamptonshire variant of Buckby (see Buckbee).
SHELLSHOCK SOFTWARE-BUG
SHELLSHOCK SOFTWARE-BUG
Male
Portuguese
Galician-Portuguese form of Latin Jesus, XESÚS means "God is salvation."Â
Girl/Female
Muslim
True believer, Upright
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Ultimate Bliss
Girl/Female
Hindu
Goddess Parvati
Boy/Male
British, English
Wealthy Wolf
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Soft; Delicate Fabric
Girl/Female
Hindu
A poem
Boy/Male
American, British, Dutch, English, German
Strong as a Wild Boar
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Great
Girl/Female
Indian, Kannada, Tamil, Telugu
Creeper; Goddess
SHELLSHOCK SOFTWARE-BUG
SHELLSHOCK SOFTWARE-BUG
SHELLSHOCK SOFTWARE-BUG
SHELLSHOCK SOFTWARE-BUG
SHELLSHOCK SOFTWARE-BUG
n.
A bugbear; anything which terrifies.
n.
A copper instrument of the horn quality of tone, shorter and more conical that the trumpet, sometimes keyed; formerly much used in military bands, very rarely in the orchestra; now superseded by the cornet; -- called also the Kent bugle.
n.
A perennial white-flowered herb of the order Ranunculaceae and genus Cimiciguga; bugwort. There are several species.
pl.
of Bugloss
n.
A general name applied to various insects belonging to the Hemiptera; as, the squash bug; the chinch bug, etc.
a.
Infested or abounding with bugs.
n.
Same as Bugaboo.
a.
Ornamented with bugles.
n.
One guilty of buggery or unnatural vice; a sodomite.
n.
One who plays on a bugle.
n.
One of various species of Coleoptera; as, the ladybug; potato bug, etc.; loosely, any beetle.
n.
Bugbane.
n.
Alt. of Bugbear
pl.
of Buggy
n.
One of certain kinds of Crustacea; as, the sow bug; pill bug; bait bug; salve bug, etc.
a.
The state of being infested with bugs.