• bestouff 2 hours ago

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).

• dathinab 28 minutes ago

> 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

• zahlman an hour ago

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.)

• INTPenis an hour ago

The idea is that you can exploit a service hosted on Linux to run these.

• nubinetwork an hour ago

At what point do we all start rolling our own microkernels? This is kind of getting silly now... 4 now in the past month?

• craftkiller an hour ago

I hate that the Qubes OS people were right.

• itintheory an hour ago

Sounds like this one is in the same kernel modules as dirtyfrag, so the existing mitigations (if in place) are sufficient.

• chasil an hour ago

RedHat's mitigation is this:

  $ cat /etc/modprobe.d/dirtyfrag.conf
  install esp4 /bin/false
  install esp6 /bin/false
  install rxrpc /bin/false
Are those correct for this exploit?

https://access.redhat.com/security/vulnerabilities/RHSB-2026...

• itintheory 40 minutes ago

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.

• LawnGnome 44 minutes ago

I don't know, but the problem with blocking esp4 and esp6 is that IPsec stops working, as I understand it.