- USN-659-1: Linux kernel vulnerabilities
- Ubuntu® 8.10 Desktop Edition enables mobile, flexible computing for a changing digital world
- Ubuntu 7.04 reaches end-of-life on October 19, 2008
- USN-656-1: CUPS vulnerabilities
- USN-655-1: exiv2 vulnerabilities
- USN-654-1: libexif vulnerabilities
- USN-653-1: D-Bus vulnerabilities
- USN-652-1: LittleCMS vulnerability
- Wikimedia chooses Ubuntu for all of its servers
- USN-651-1: Ruby vulnerabilities
- USN-650-1: cpio vulnerability
- USN-649-1: OpenSSH vulnerabilities
- USN-648-1: nasm vulnerability
- USN-647-1: Thunderbird vulnerabilities
- USN-645-3: Firefox and xulrunner regression
- Ubuntu server team wants to know – how do you Ubuntu?
- USN-645-2: Firefox vulnerabilities
- USN-645-1: Firefox and xulrunner vulnerabilities
- USN-646-1: rdesktop vulnerabilities
- USN-644-1: libxml2 vulnerabilities
- USN-643-1: FreeType vulnerabilities
- USN-642-1: Postfix vulnerability
- USN-641-1: Racoon vulnerabilities
- USN-640-1: libxml2 vulnerability
- USN-639-1: tiff vulnerability
- USN-638-1: Yelp vulnerability
- USN-637-1: Linux kernel vulnerabilities
- USN-636-1: Postfix vulnerability
- Canonical to Offer Yahoo! Zimbra Desktop through Ubuntu Partner Repository
- USN-635-1: xine-lib vulnerabilities
- Unison released for Ubuntu to bring unified communications to Linux
- Canonical To Offer Alfresco Labs Pre-Packaged Within Ubuntu Distribution
- USN-626-2: Devhelp, Epiphany, Midbrowser and Yelp update
- USN-634-1: OpenLDAP vulnerability
- USN-633-1: libxslt vulnerabilities