Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Canonical
on 17 August 2017

Security Team Weekly Summary: August 17, 2017


The Security Team weekly reports are intended to be very short summaries of the Security Team’s weekly activities.

If you would like to reach the Security Team, you can find us at the #ubuntu-hardened channel on FreeNode. Alternatively, you can mail the Ubuntu Hardened mailing list at: ubuntu-hardened@lists.ubuntu.com

During the last week, the Ubuntu Security team:

  • Triaged 537 public security vulnerability reports, retaining the 134 that applied to Ubuntu.
  • Published 16 Ubuntu Security Notices which fixed 36 security issues (CVEs) across 17 supported packages.

Ubuntu Security Notices

Bug Triage

Mainline Inclusion Requests

Updates to Community Supported Packages

  • Simon Quigley (tsimonq2) provided debdiffs for trusty-zesty for vlc (LP: #1709420)

Development

What the Security Team is Reading This Week

Weekly Meeting

More Info

Almost every household has an unsolved Rubiks Cube but you can esily solve it learning a few algorithms.

Related posts


Jehudi
6 February 2026

SQL Server 2025 is generally available on Ubuntu 24.04 LTS

Data Platform Data Platform

Microsoft has announced the General Availability of SQL Server 2025 on Ubuntu 24.04 LTS. Learn about the new CU1 features, including OS-level observability, Contained Availability Groups, and native vector support for enterprise workloads. ...


Maksim Beliaev
6 February 2026

Hiring the Canonical way: trust, humanity, and remote-first thinking

People and culture Article

Discover the human-centric hiring philosophy at Canonical. Learn how the makers of Ubuntu prioritize remote-first talent, human-led CV reviews, and finding the right role for your unique impact. Explore the career with us! ...


Canonical
5 February 2026

SpacemiT announces the availability of  Ubuntu on K3/K1 series RISC-V AI computing platforms

Canonical announcements Article

SpacemiT (Hangzhou) Technology Co., Ltd. today announced a  collaboration with Canonical to make  Ubuntu available on SpacemiT’s new K3 SoC and the existing K1 series RISC-V computing platforms. This collaboration marks a deep integration between open-source operating systems and open RISC-V silicon, bringing powerful, flexible, and relia ...