Lots of privilege escalations these days. But are there that many multiuser Linux systems nowadays ? I'm under the impression the whole landscape is either servers or single-user desktops (and ofc Android phones).
> many multiuser Linux systems nowadays
not relevant IMHO
we don't live anymore in a time where you can trust that local apps do not misbehave, and in such a context LPE is pretty bad even in a single user system
just thing about all the supply chain problems of recent times
I impersonate multiple users on my machine for organizational reasons.
LPEs also potentially make user-level malware into system-level malware, which is only marginally more impactful for a single person on a desktop, but considerably harder to clean up. (It also broadens the range of what such malware could exfiltrate from me.)
The idea is that you can exploit a service hosted on Linux to run these.
At what point do we all start rolling our own microkernels? This is kind of getting silly now... 4 now in the past month?
I hate that the Qubes OS people were right.
Sounds like this one is in the same kernel modules as dirtyfrag, so the existing mitigations (if in place) are sufficient.
Lots of privilege escalations these days. But are there that many multiuser Linux systems nowadays ? I'm under the impression the whole landscape is either servers or single-user desktops (and ofc Android phones).
> many multiuser Linux systems nowadays
not relevant IMHO
we don't live anymore in a time where you can trust that local apps do not misbehave, and in such a context LPE is pretty bad even in a single user system
just thing about all the supply chain problems of recent times
I impersonate multiple users on my machine for organizational reasons.
LPEs also potentially make user-level malware into system-level malware, which is only marginally more impactful for a single person on a desktop, but considerably harder to clean up. (It also broadens the range of what such malware could exfiltrate from me.)
The idea is that you can exploit a service hosted on Linux to run these.
At what point do we all start rolling our own microkernels? This is kind of getting silly now... 4 now in the past month?
I hate that the Qubes OS people were right.
Sounds like this one is in the same kernel modules as dirtyfrag, so the existing mitigations (if in place) are sufficient.
RedHat's mitigation is this:
Are those correct for this exploit?https://access.redhat.com/security/vulnerabilities/RHSB-2026...
Yep, that's the advice from AWS for the previous set of vulnerabilities:
https://aws.amazon.com/security/security-bulletins/2026-027-...
That one also includes disabling user namespaces. Could be problematic if they're in use.
I don't know, but the problem with blocking esp4 and esp6 is that IPsec stops working, as I understand it.