SSH, or secure shell, is the mainstay of remote access and administration in the Linux world, and the lack of any straightforward equivalent has always been an awkward feature of the Windows world.
A vulnerability affects all versions of the OpenSSH client released in the past two decades, ever since the application was released in 1999. With the release of the April 2018 Update, the OpenSSH ...
Open the Windows 10 Start menu and search for “Apps & Features”. In the “Apps & Features” heading, click “Optional Features”. Scroll down the list to see if “OpenSSH Client” is listed. If not, click ...