>Several Linux distros have issued updates to fix a vulnerability in Sudo, a Linux app behind the "sudo" command, which can allow an unprivileged attacker to gain root privileges.
>The issue, tracked as CVE-2017-1000367, came to light two days ago when security researchers from Qualys published an advisory on the matter.
>Researchers say that an attacker that is in the position to run bash commands can create malformed sudo commands that will allow him to overwrite any file on the system, even root-owned content. In other words, the attacker gains the root-level privileges.
SUDO FAGGOT NIGGERS BTFO HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
>mobile faggot
>no source
>autistic
lel
>>60786013
>select CVE-2017-1000367
>right click
>click Search with Google
Wow. You are fake news.
>>60785946
Fix released several days ago, lol.
>>60785946.
>SUDO FAGGOT NIGGERS BTFO HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
error faggot not found
>>60785946
>came to light 2 days ago
>fixed
Meanwhile closed source applications
>Came to light 10 years ago
>...
>>60786033
https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2017-1000367
No, you are fake news
>On an SELinux-enabled system, if a user is Sudoer for a command that
does not grant him full root privileges, he can overwrite any file on
the filesystem