Wednesday, October 1

Enterprise & SaaS

Oracle Integrates GPT-5 into Its Enterprise Cloud and SaaS Portfolio
Enterprise & SaaS

Oracle Integrates GPT-5 into Its Enterprise Cloud and SaaS Portfolio

Oracle has integrated OpenAI’s GPT-5 to its cloud offerings and SaaS applications, therefore, increasing the powers of generative AI to cover a range of industries, including databases, human resources, finance, and supply chain management tools. This tactical move underscores the growing need for cloud service providers to directly include artificial intelligence features in company software, the same move we witnessed with Perplexity’s offer for Google Chrome. Oracle said on August 18 that NetSuite, Oracle Fusion Cloud Applications, and Oracle Database now all provide access to GPT-5. This launch helps chores like drafting job descriptions in HR and summarizing consumer interactions within customer experience systems by bringing generative artificial intelligence support right into da...
Microsoft’s August 2025 Patch Tuesday: One Zero-Day and 107 Flaws Patched
Enterprise & SaaS

Microsoft’s August 2025 Patch Tuesday: One Zero-Day and 107 Flaws Patched

Microsoft released its most current Patch Tuesday updates on August 12, 2025, resolving a remarkable total of 107 flaws across its entire ecosystem. Solutions for one openly known zero-day flaw that poses a severe threat to corporate Windows systems are included in this update. In Microsoft’s August 2025 patch, each vulnerability category has a specific number of bugs, as mentioned below: 44 Elevation of Privilege Vulnerabilities 35 Remote Code Execution Vulnerabilities 18 Information Disclosure Vulnerabilities 4 Denial of Service Vulnerabilities 9 Spoofing Vulnerabilities One of the most alarming problems in this release is a zero-day vulnerability discovered as CVE-2025-53779, which impacts Windows Kerberos. It was revealed before the patch was implemented, this vu...
Windows 10 ESU Gets a Price Cut: Now $30 Covers Up to 10 PCs
Enterprise & SaaS

Windows 10 ESU Gets a Price Cut: Now $30 Covers Up to 10 PCs

According to Microsoft’s official announcement, registering a Windows 10 computer in the Extended Security Updates (ESU) program requires the establishment of a Microsoft Account to finish the purchase for a $30 charge. The good thing about this advancement is that one Windows 10 ESU license may be used for up to 10 devices logged into the same account, thus you won't have to pay $30 for each individual device as originally thought.  Surprisingly, this fact was not prominently disclosed in Microsoft’s first release. These circumstances have both benefits and drawbacks. The good news is that the $30 license is now rather less expensive; the disadvantage is that you must still register for a Microsoft Account in order to keep getting security updates after Windows 10 reaches its end ...
Urgent Alert: CISA and Microsoft Warn Vulnerability in Hybrid Exchange Servers
Enterprise & SaaS

Urgent Alert: CISA and Microsoft Warn Vulnerability in Hybrid Exchange Servers

Late Wednesday, Microsoft and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) cautioned about a recently found vulnerability in hybrid Microsoft Exchange. This defect could allow attackers to move from the on-premises edition of the program to its cloud equivalent, so maybe seize whole system control. Identified as CVE-2025-53786, this vulnerability could enable an attacker with administrative access to the on-premises Exchange to increase their privileges by exploiting weak hybrid-joined configurations, according to CISA’s alert. Microsoft has not yet seen any indications that hackers are actively exploiting this vulnerability, according to the CISA alert. Preferring to remain anonymous to offer an honest assessment, a CISA employee confirmed that the agency has simi...