ClickCease May 2025 - TuxCare

Oracle End of Life Explained:...

Key Takeaways Oracle Linux End of Life (EOL) means no more official security patches or updates. This leaves your systems vulnerable and non-compliant. Organizations can upgrade, migrate, or extend security....

TuxCare FedRAMP Bundle for AlmaLinux...

PALO ALTO, Calif. – May 29, 2025 – TuxCare, a global innovator in securing open source, today announced the release of its new TuxCare FedRAMP Bundle for AlmaLinux that provides...

Technical Enshittification: Why Everything in...

Digital platforms we use today are infected with creeping awfulness, and Cory Doctorow has given it a name – Enshittification. Have you ever felt like an online platform is giving...

CVE VS CVSS Explained: Vulnerabilities,...

Key Takeaways CVE provides unique identifiers for vulnerabilities, facilitating tracking and communication across platforms. CVSS assigns numerical scores to vulnerabilities, helping prioritization based on severity. Together, CVE and CVSS empower...

Introducing the TuxCare FedRAMP Bundle...

Cloud service providers working with U.S. federal agencies are required to meet FedRAMP’s strict security, cryptography, and reporting standards. This process is often complex, time sensitive, and difficult to manage...

TuxCare To Continue its Long-Term...

PALO ALTO, Calif. – May 21 , 2025 – TuxCare, a global innovator in securing open source, today announced that its FIPS for AlmaLinux offerings are set to include FIPS...

End of Life vs End...

Key Takeaways End of Life (EOL) means the system stops receiving updates entirely — no patches, no features, no vendor maintenance. End of Support (EOS) means the vendor ends technical...

What Is Vulnerability Patching? Benefits...

Key Takeaways Vulnerability patching is critical — over 60% of breaches exploit known flaws that already had patches available. Patch management is a core component of vulnerability management, covering discovery,...

What CentOS EOL Means and...

Key Takeaways CentOS 6, 7, and 8 no longer receive security updates, leaving systems exposed and unsafe for production use. You have two options — migrate to alternatives like AlmaLinux...

Rethinking Your Angular End-of-Life (EOL)...

  Google supports each Angular release for only 18 months; Angular 17 reaches end-of-life on May 15, 2025. After that, official patches stop, leaving applications open to unpatched vulnerabilities and...

Still Rocking the Classics? A...

Many enterprises still rely on AngularJS for stable, mission-critical applications despite its official end-of-life status. Unsupported AngularJS apps pose increasing security, compliance, and operational risks over time. TuxCare’s Endless Lifecycle...

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