15-Year-Old Linux Vulnerability ‘GhostLock’ Earns Researchers $92k From Google

  Rassegna Stampa, Security
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Nebula Security has published technical information and exploit code targeting a Linux kernel vulnerability that affects all major distributions since 2011.

Tracked as CVE-2026-43499 and referred to as GhostLock, the security defect was introduced in Linux 2.6.39 and lurked in the kernel for 15 years until a patch was rolled out in April.

GhostLock is a use-after-free issue introduced with a helper function designed to clean up after a task has been closed, as part of the kernel’s system of prioritizing urgent tasks.

Normally, the cleanup function would clear the current task. Due to the security defect, when a deadlock is encountered and a rollback occurs, the function clears the memory and reuses it while a pointer to it exists in another task.

The issue exists because the function assumes that the current task is the one that needs to be cleared up. However, when a requeue is requested, the function cleans up on behalf of a sleeping thread instead of the current one.

Nebula Security says it was able to exploit the vulnerability to control the inadvertently freed memory and achieve local privilege escalation to root.

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It also demonstrated that the security defect could be exploited for a container escape in Google’s kernelCTF program and received a $92,337 bug bounty reward.

GhostLock is the latest in a series of Linux kernel flaws that have been publicly disclosed over the past months. The list also includes Januscape, Bad Epoll, DirtyClone, CIFSwitch, DirtyDecrypt (aka DirtyCBC), Fragnesia, and Dirty Frag.

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https://www.securityweek.com/15-year-old-linux-vulnerability-ghostlock-earns-researchers-92k-from-google/