CVE-2026-46300 is described as a Linux kernel privilege-escalation flaw, and its similarity to Dirty Frag and Copy Fail suggests a repeating security pattern rather than a one-off mistake.
A second kernel flaw in the same code area as Copy Fail shows how a local account can become full administrator when packet fragments are handled as if they were privately owned.
A decade-old flaw in the Linux kernel, now actively exploited, threatens the foundations of cloud and enterprise security.
A decade-old bug lurking in nearly every modern Linux system lets attackers seize control-clouds included.
A newly exposed kernel bug gives attackers an all-access pass to major Linux systems-no advanced skills required.
A recently uncovered flaw lets ordinary users seize full control on nearly every major Linux distribution-no race conditions, no tricks, just a 732-byte script and a 7-year-old mistake.
A silent flaw hiding in Linux’s cryptographic engine let attackers seize full system control for nearly a decade-undetected, reliable, and shockingly simple to exploit.
A newly exposed zero-day flaw, “Copy Fail,” lets any local user seize full control on nearly every major Linux system since 2017-no hacking wizardry required.
A tiny logic bug in the Linux kernel’s cryptographic core silently enabled root takeovers and container escapes across major distributions since 2017.