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Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Apple, Oracle restore Java on OS X






Apple on Friday shipped an update to Java 6 for Mac users running OS X Snow Leopard, matching Oracle's cadence for Java 7, which was patched the same day.

Customers running OS X Lion or OS X Mountain Lion must update Java 7 manually, or wait for the Java update tool to trigger.

Dubbed "Java for Mac OS X v10.6 Update 12," Apple's update of Feb. 1 patched 30 vulnerabilities in Java 6.

That same day, Oracle accelerated the release of its regularly-scheduled security update -- initially slated to ship Feb. 19 -- citing "active exploitation 'in the wild' of one of the vulnerabilities affecting the Java Runtime Environment (JRE) in desktop browsers."

Friday's Oracle update patched 50 vulnerabilities, the majority of them in the Java browser plug-in.

The updates -- whether from Apple or Oracle -- restore Java functionality to OS X: Last week, Apple issued yet another order to block Java's browser plug-in from running in OS X Snow Leopard, Lion and Mountain Lion via those operating systems' bare bones, built-in XProtect anti-malware filter.

Apple stopped bundling Java after OS X 10.6, aka Snow Leopard, and in 2011 handed off development and patch maintenance to Oracle. Patches for Java 7 are thus not available to Lion and Mountain Lion -- OS X 10.7 and OS X 10.8, respectively -- via Apple's Software Update service, but must be retrieved from Oracle.

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