New ‘Pack2TheRoot’ flaw gives hackers root Linux access
A new vulnerability dubbed Pack2TheRoot could be exploited in the PackageKit daemon to allow local Linux users to install or remove system packages and gain root permissions. [...]
Root access gives an attacker or administrator complete control of a Unix-like system, allowing changes to data, software, accounts, and security settings.
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Background for this topic.
Root access is unrestricted administrative control of a Unix or Linux system. The root account, or an equivalent privilege obtained through mechanisms such as sudo, can read or change nearly any file, alter system configuration, install software, and control running processes. Related uses of “root” may describe equivalent administrator privileges in containers, cloud workloads, network appliances, or mobile devices.
Because root privileges can bypass ordinary access controls, stolen administrative credentials or a vulnerability that enables privilege escalation can let an attacker modify security settings, access protected data, establish persistence, or disrupt the host. Organizations generally reduce exposure by disabling direct root login where practical, using named administrator accounts with least privilege, protecting privileged authentication with strong controls, and recording and reviewing elevation events. Vulnerability management should prioritize flaws that can grant local or remote root-level execution; during an incident, investigators must assess whether root access was obtained and treat the host’s integrity as potentially compromised.
A new vulnerability dubbed Pack2TheRoot could be exploited in the PackageKit daemon to allow local Linux users to install or remove system packages and gain root permissions. [...]
A critical security vulnerability has been disclosed in a Python-based sandbox called Terrarium that could result in arbitrary code execution
Security teams often present MTTR as an internal KPI. Leadership sees it differently: every hour a threat dwells inside the environment is an hour of potential data exfiltration, service disruption, regulatory exposure, and brand damage. The root cause of slow MTTR is almost never "not enough analysts." It is almost always the same structural problem: threat intelligence that exists
Stolen OAuth tokens, which are at the root of these breaches, "are the new attack surface, the new lateral movement," a researcher notes.