Back-to-back kernel vulnerabilities in Linux has defenders scrambling to apply defenses in the age of quick turnaround time ...
A new Linux zero-day exploit, named Dirty Frag, allows local attackers to gain root privileges on most major Linux ...
The privilege escalation vulnerability, which is similar to other Linux flaws like Copy Fail and Dirty Pipe, may already be ...
Dirty Frag exposes Linux systems to root escalation through chained kernel flaws, impacting Ubuntu, RHEL, Fedora, and others.
Linux users have been bitten by yet another vulnerability that gives containers and untrusted users the ability to gain root ...
A newly disclosed Linux privilege escalation flaw dubbed "Dirty Frag" is raising concerns among security researchers who warn ...
This Linux kernel vulnerability has defenders scrambling. Here's which systems are affected - and what you should do ASAP.
Dirty Frag, a critical Linux kernel zero-day vulnerability with no patch and giving hackers root, has gone public after an ...
The actively exploited flaw builds on Dirty Pipe and Copy Fail techniques to overwrite page cache and gain full system ...
Instead of waiting for patch cycles, admins could simply shut down vulnerable functions before attackers get there ...
A researcher from offensive security firm Theori has found a nine-year-old flaw in the Linux kernel with the help of AI ...
An even more locked-down version of the foundation most users never see.