Linux Root Exploit: Millions of Cloud Servers at Risk [CVE-2026-31431]
A nasty bug in the Linux kernel's crypto subsystem is letting unprivileged users become root. Millions of cloud servers are exposed.
A nasty bug in the Linux kernel's crypto subsystem is letting unprivileged users become root. Millions of cloud servers are exposed.
A hacker's cursor hovers over a SharePoint login, unseen doors cracking open. Microsoft's latest patches slam shut a zero-day that's already drawing blood in the wild.
Your security team's grinding harder than ever. But one billion CISA KEV records scream the truth: humans hit a ceiling. Time to automate or get exploited.
What if your network's brain—the server managing thousands of endpoints—is wide open to anyone with a crafted request? CISA just gave feds until Friday to slam that door shut on a Fortinet flaw that's already drawing real-world fire.
CISA's Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog just grew by one: a Palo Alto firewall bug that's already drawing fire from attackers. Patch by September 9, or risk becoming the next DDoS reflector.
Hackers are pounding at the gates. Shadowserver spots 14,000+ exposed F5 BIG-IP APM systems, bleeding from a freshly minted RCE vuln that CISA's already sounding alarms over.