US government warns Linux CVE-2024-1086 flaw is now being exploited for ransomware attacks


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:

  • Two New Spectre-Class CPU Flaws Discovered—Intel Pays $100K Bounty

    July 11, 2018

    Intel has paid out a $100,000 bug bounty for new processor vulnerabilities that are related to Spectre variant one (CVE-2017-5753). The new Spectre-class variants are tracked as Spectre 1.1 (CVE-2018-3693) and Spectre 1.2, of which Spectre 1.1 described as a bounds-check bypass store attack has been considered as more dangerous. Earlier this year, Google Project Zero researchers ...

  • Two Zero-Day Exploits Found After Someone Uploaded ‘Unarmed’ PoC to VirusTotal

    July 2, 2018

    Security researchers at Microsoft have unveiled details of two critical and important zero-day vulnerabilities that had recently been discovered after someone uploaded a malicious PDF file to VirusTotal, and get patched before being used in the wild. In late March, researchers at ESET found a malicious PDF file on VirusTotal, which they shared with the security team ...

  • Researchers Uncover New Attacks Against LTE Network Protocol

    June 29, 2018

    If your mobile carrier offers LTE, also known as the 4G network, you need to beware as your network communication can be hijacked remotely. A team of researchers has discovered some critical weaknesses in the ubiquitous LTE mobile device standard that could allow sophisticated hackers to spy on users’ cellular networks, modify the contents of their ...

  • RAMpage Attack Explained – Exploiting RowHammer On Android Again!

    June 29, 2018

    A team of security researchers has discovered a new set of techniques that could allow hackers to bypass all kind of present mitigations put in place to prevent DMA-based Rowhammer attacks against Android devices. Dubbed RAMpage, the new technique (CVE-2018-9442) could re-enable an unprivileged Android app running on the victim’s device to take advantage from the previously ...

  • Axis Cameras Riddled With Vulnerabilities Enabling “Full Control”

    June 18, 2018

    A slew of vulnerabilities in Axis cameras could enable an attacker to access camera video streams, control the camera, add it to a botnet or render it useless. Researchers at VDOO, who disclosed the vulns on Monday, recommended that customers update immediately after finding that more than 400 Axis IP cameras are impacted. Axis deploys a ...

  • GnuPG Flaw in Encryption Tools Lets Attackers Spoof Anyone’s Signature

    June 14, 2018

    A security researcher has discovered a critical vulnerability in some of the world’s most popular and widely used email encryption clients that use OpenPGP standard and rely on GnuPG for encrypting and digitally signing messages. The disclosure comes almost a month after researchers revealed a series of flaws, dubbed eFail, in PGP and S/Mime encryption tools that ...