“Bad Epoll” Linux Kernel Bug Lets Any User Grab Root
A newly disclosed use-after-free in the Linux kernel’s epoll code, CVE-2026-46242, lets an unprivileged user get root on affected Linux and Android systems. A fix is out, but it took two attempts.
A newly disclosed use-after-free in the Linux kernel’s epoll code, CVE-2026-46242, lets an unprivileged user get root on affected Linux and Android systems. A fix is out, but it took two attempts.
CVE-2026-43503 DirtyClone is the fourth DirtyFrag-family privilege escalation in six weeks. JFrog’s public PoC raises the urgency. More variants may still be in the attack surface.
Newly discovered vulnerability “Dirty Pipe” vulnerability most Linux distros, giving root access to the attacker…
A heap overflow vulnerability has been discovered that reportedly affects multiple distributions. Thankfully, a patch…
A serious vulnerability in Linux Kernel could leak data as it exposed stack memory. The…
While mitigations are in place to protect Linux systems from Spectre attacks, newly discovered vulnerabilities…
Heads up Linux users! Numerous vulnerabilities have been discovered in the Linux kernel that could…
Researchers have found a new vulnerability affecting Linux devices. Dubbed BleedingTooth, the Bluetooth vulnerability allows…
Heads up all Windows and Linux users! A serious vulnerability potentially exposes your device to…
Linux users unknowingly remained vulnerable to a serious security flaw for almost four years. Recently,…