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When jQuery scripts fail to work on your Web server, chances are the jQuery file is missing or you did not include it correctly in your HTML code.
For at least three years, hackers have abused a zero-day in one of the most popular jQuery plugins to plant web shells and take over vulnerable web servers, ZDNet has learned.
The larger issue is that jQuery File Upload code forks and variations used in production packages – some 7,800 of them, according to Cashdollar – are also vulnerable to file upload and code ...
Exploit described in YouTube videos jQuery File Upload has been vulnerable for eight years, since the Apache 2.3.9 release in 2010.
Researchers at Trustwave’s SpiderLabs have noticed a rather large uptick in the number of jQuery files that have been injected with malicious code over the last few months. The actors behind the ...