Oracle has published a collection of software patches that addresses security vulnerabilities in a range of the company’s products, including its database and application server software.Included in the updates, released Tuesday, are 14 fixes for bugs in the Oracle database, several of which could be easily exploited in a widespread manner, according to Oracle.The company has also released patches for the Oracle Application Server, Collaboration Suite, E-Business Suite and Enterprise Manager software, as well as for its PeopleSoft PeopleTools software and JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Security Server. SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe Several of these vulnerabilities are “significant,” and users should patch their software as soon as possible, said security vendor Symantec in an alert sent to customers shortly after the updates were published. “No workarounds for these issues have been published by Oracle,” Symantec said. Of particular interest is a fix for a previously disclosed vulnerability in the Procedural Language/Structured Query Language gateway software that is used to integrate Oracle’s database with Web-based applications. Security researcher David Litchfield published a fix for this problem in January, but Oracle had warned users not to deploy his software, saying it would break a number of Oracle products.The vulnerability affects the Oracle Application Server, the Oracle Collaboration Suite and the Oracle E-Business Suite, according to Oracle’s documentation. The Oracle HTTP server, which is bundled with the Oracle database, is also affected. In total, the company has patched 36 vulnerabilities in this set of patches, although some users will not get the updates until May, depending on which operating system and product version they are using.Despite the update, there are still a large number of unpatched bugs in Oracle products, according to Cesar Cerrudo, chief executive officer of security research firm Argeniss. Earlier this month, his company released a security research tool called the Argeniss Ultimate 0day Exploits Pack, which contained exploit code for six unpatched vulnerabilities in Oracle’s database. Five of those bugs remain unpatched following the updates released Tuesday, he said.Oracle still needs to do a better job of patching known vulnerabilities, he said, because the slow rate at which it fixes problems is putting customers at risk. “We have more than 50 unpatched vulnerabilities on Oracle’s database server,” he said. “The oldest unfixed vulnerability we have reported to Oracle is from February 2005. That’s a long time to patch a bug.”Oracle releases these Critical Patch Updates once every three months. The next such release is scheduled for July 18.More information on the April updates can be found online. -Robert McMillan, IDG News ServiceFor related news coverage, read Oracle Lays Out Telecom Service Delivery Platform.Check out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content brandpost Lessons from the field: Why you need a platform engineering practice (…and how to build it) Adopting platform engineering will better serve customers and provide invaluable support to their development teams. By VMware Tanzu Vanguards Oct 02, 2023 6 mins Software Deployment Devops feature The dark arts of digital transformation — and how to master them Sometimes IT leaders need a little magic to push digital initiatives forward. Here are five ways to make transformation obstacles disappear. By Dan Tynan Oct 02, 2023 11 mins Business IT Alignment Digital Transformation IT Strategy feature What is a project management office (PMO)? The key to standardizing project success The ever-increasing pace of change has upped the pressure on companies to deliver new products, services, and capabilities. And they’re relying on PMOs to ensure that work gets done consistently, efficiently, and in line with business objective By Mary K. Pratt Oct 02, 2023 8 mins Digital Transformation Project Management Tools IT Leadership opinion The changing face of cybersecurity threats in 2023 Cybersecurity has always been a cat-and-mouse game, but the mice keep getting bigger and are becoming increasingly harder to hunt. By Dipti Parmar Sep 29, 2023 8 mins Cybercrime Security Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe