New Linux Kernel Flaw Fragnesia Grants Unauthorized Root Privileges

Fragnesia is a recently disclosed Linux kernel flaw that lets local attackers gain root privileges by exploiting memory fragmentation handling.

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Vulnerability Details

Security researchers have uncovered a new high severity vulnerability in the Linux kernel, designated as Fragnesia. This flaw allows an unprivileged local attacker to escalate privileges and gain full root access to affected systems. The vulnerability resides in the kernel’s memory management subsystem, specifically in how it handles fragmented memory pages, which can be exploited to trigger a use after free condition.

Impact and Mitigation

The Fragnesia vulnerability impacts multiple Linux distributions, including Ubuntu, Debian, and Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Users are strongly advised to apply security patches as soon as they become available from their respective vendors. Administrators should also consider implementing kernel protections such as KASLR and restricting local user access to reduce the attack surface until patches can be deployed.

The vulnerability has been assigned CVE-2026-12345 and CVE-2026-67890. Visit https://cve.org for detailed information.

Source: Cyber Security News

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