A new Linux kernel bug lets an ordinary, unprivileged user become root. It now hits Android too. Researchers have named it Bad Epoll. The Bad Epoll vulnerability carries the identifier CVE-2026-46242.
Can't rename Directory to directory on an exFAT drive? Learn why case only renames fail, how exFAT compares filenames, and ...
Eighteen new GNU releases in the last month (as of June 30, 2026): apl-2.0: GNU APL is a free interpreter for the programming language APL. It is an implementation of the ISO stan ...
Is Linux Kernel 7.2 really 43 million lines? We verified the count with wc, cloc, tokei, and scc tools and explain why the ...
MUO on MSN
I found the Linux tool that shows what's using your disk space — and lets you clean it up instantly
It takes fifteen seconds to see exactly where your space went.
XDA Developers on MSN
I held onto X11 longer than I should have, and switching to Wayland fixed these things I didn't know were broken
Why didn't I do this earlier?
Linux kernel privilege escalation exploit DirtyClone (CVE-2026-43503) is publicly documented: JFrog published a working attack walkthrough Thursday showing how any local user can gain root on ...
CVE-2026-43503 DirtyClone is the fourth DirtyFrag-family privilege escalation in six weeks. JFrog's public PoC raises the ...
The new kernel, Linux 7.1, brings a modern NTFS driver and activates Intel's FRED by default. Furthermore, the use of AI in development is causing a stir.
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