Description

In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: apparmor: fix unprivileged local user can do privileged policy management An unprivileged local user can load, replace, and remove profiles by opening the apparmorfs interfaces, via a confused deputy attack, by passing the opened fd to a privileged process, and getting the privileged process to write to the interface. This does require a privileged target that can be manipulated to do the write for the unprivileged process, but once such access is achieved full policy management is possible and all the possible implications that implies: removing confinement, DoS of system or target applications by denying all execution, by-passing the unprivileged user namespace restriction, to exploiting kernel bugs for a local privilege escalation. The policy management interface can not have its permissions simply changed from 0666 to 0600 because non-root processes need to be able to load policy to different policy namespaces. Instead ensure the task writing the interface has privileges that are a subset of the task that opened the interface. This is already done via policy for confined processes, but unconfined can delegate access to the opened fd, by-passing the usual policy check.

INFO

Published Date :

2026-03-18T17:54:41.974Z

Last Modified :

2026-04-18T08:57:28.196Z

Source :

Linux
AFFECTED PRODUCTS

The following products are affected by CVE-2026-23268 vulnerability.

Vendors Products
Linux
  • Linux Kernel

CVSS Vulnerability Scoring System

Detailed values of each vector for above chart.
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Attack Complexity
Privileges Required
User Interaction
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Availability Impact