The US government is warning that a Linux flaw introduced more than a decade ago – and fixed more than a year ago – is being actively used in ransomware attacks. In February 2014, a vulnerability was introduced into the Linux kernel via a commit.
The bug was first disclosed in late January 2024, and described as a “use-after-free weakness in the netfilter: nf_tables kernel component”. It was fixed later that month, and was given a label CVE-2024-1086. Its severity score is 7.8/10 (high) and can be exploited to achieve local privilege escalation.
Read more…
Source: TechRadar News
Sign up for the Cyber Security Review Newsletter
The latest cyber security news and insights delivered right to your inbox
Related:
- Attacks on industrial enterprises using RMS and TeamViewer: new data
November 5, 2020
In summer 2019, Kaspersky ICS CERT identified a new wave of phishing emails containing various malicious attachments. The emails target companies and organizations from different sectors of the economy that are associated with industrial production in one way or another. We reported these attacks in 2018 in an article entitled “Attacks on industrial enterprises using RMS ...
- VMware Issues Updated Fix For Critical ESXi Flaw
November 4, 2020
VMware issued an updated fix for a critical-severity remote code execution flaw in its ESXi hypervisor products. Wednesday’s VMware advisory said updated patch versions were available after it was discovered the previous patch, released Oct. 20, did not completely address the vulnerability. That’s because certain versions that were affected were not previously covered in the earlier ...
- Hacker group uses Solaris zero-day to breach corporate networks
November 2, 2020
Mandiant, the investigations unit of security firm FireEye, has published details today about a new threat actor it calls UNC1945 that the security firm says it used a zero-day vulnerability in the Oracle Solaris operating system as part of its intrusions into corporate networks. Regular targets of UNC1945 attacks included the likes of telecommunications, financial, and ...
- Google patches second Chrome zero-day in two weeks
November 2, 2020
Google has released a security update today for its Chrome web browser that patches ten security bugs, including one zero-day vulnerability that is currently actively exploited in the wild. Identified as CVE-2020-16009, the zero-day was discovered by Google’s Threat Analysis Group (TAG), a security team at Google tasked with tracking threat actors and their ongoing operations. Read ...
- Windows kernel zero-day disclosed by Google’s Project Zero after bug exploited in the wild by hackers
October 30, 2020
Google’s Project Zero bug-hunting team has disclosed a Windows kernel flaw that’s being actively exploited by miscreants to gain administrator access on compromised machines. The web giant’s bug report was privately disclosed to Microsoft on October 22, and publicly revealed just seven days later, after it detected persons unknown exploiting the programming blunder. The privilege-escalation issue ...
- Oracle WebLogic Server RCE Flaw Under Active Attack
October 29, 2020
If an organization hasn’t updated their Oracle WebLogic servers to protect them against a recently disclosed RCE flaw, researchers have a dire warning: “Assume it has been compromised.” Oracle WebLogic Server is a popular application server used in building and deploying enterprise Java EE applications. The console component of the WebLogic Server has a flaw, CVE-2020-14882, ...

