Adobe has released a major security update addressing nearly 140 vulnerabilities across several of its widely used products, including ColdFusion, Adobe Experience Manager (AEM), Acrobat, Reader, Creative Cloud Desktop, and the DNG SDK. ColdFusion alone received patches for 12 vulnerabilities, three of which CVE-2025-61808, CVE-2025-61809, and CVE-2025-61830 are rated critical with a CVSS score of 9.1. These flaws involve dangerous file uploads, improper input validation, and unsafe deserialization, all of which could allow remote code execution. Fixes are available in ColdFusion 2025 update 5, 2023 update 7, and 2021 update 23. Adobe Experience Manager saw the largest update, with 117 vulnerabilities resolved—116 of them cross-site scripting (XSS) issues. Two of the XSS flaws, tracked as CVE-2025-64537 and CVE-2025-64539, are critical with CVSS 9.3 scores. Additional high-severity issues tied to third-party dependencies were also patched. These fixes are included in AEM Cloud Service 2025.12 and AEM 6.5 (via SP1 GRANITE-61551 Hotfix and version 6.5.24). Adobe marked these updates with a Priority 1 rating, emphasizing immediate deployment to prevent potential exploitation. Adobe urges all enterprises and individuals using its products to apply the latest patches promptly, as outdated versions pose significant security risks. Although no active exploitation has been observed, the sheer number and criticality of the flaws warrant swift action. Organizations should maintain updated software, restrict unnecessary exposure of services, apply strong endpoint protection, and enforce secure coding practices to mitigate exploitation risks. Regular patching, strong access controls, and continuous monitoring remain essential for safeguarding Adobe deployments in production environments.
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