A new Linux zero-day vulnerability, named Dirty Frag, allows local attackers to gain root privileges on most major Linux ...
A researcher shared their findings with Linux distro maintainers, but leaked before a patch was built.
Security researchers have discovered a new, critical flaw in the Linux kernel that attackers can exploit to gain root access. No patches are yet available to fix ...
Hot on the heels of Copy Fail comes Dirty Frag. A Linux kernel zero-day vulnerability with no patch, giving hackers root.
Dirty Frag exposes Linux systems to root escalation through chained kernel flaws, impacting Ubuntu, RHEL, Fedora, and others.
A great disturbance in the cyberspace, as if millions of sysadmins suddenly cried out in terror.
Similar to the “Copy Fail” exploit revealed a week ago, the two “Dirty Frag” exploits (CVE-2026-43284) also allow a local user to give themselves root privileges on nearly any Linux distribution. The ...
CISA warns that the nine-year-old Linux Copy Fail flaw is being actively exploited, allowing local attackers to gain root ...
CVE-2026-31431 CVSS 7.8 flaw since 2017 enables root via 732-byte exploit, impacting major Linux distributions.
The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency has warned users to update their Linux systems following the discovery ...
Further vulnerabilities named “Dirty Frag” enable privilege escalation. All distributions are reportedly affected.
CISA has warned that threat actors have started exploiting the "Copy Fail" Linux security vulnerability in the wild, one day ...