Chronomaly Zero-Day Lets Hackers Gain Root
A newly disclosed chronomaly zero-day lets hackers gain root access on Linux systems running certain vulnerable kernel versions, according to cybersecurity researcher farazsth98. The exploit leverages multiple security flaws that allow attackers to escalate privileges and take full control of a targeted system.
Researchers linked the vulnerability to three tracked issues: CVE-2025-54322, CVE-2025-48543, and CVE-2025-38352. These flaws affect unspecified versions of the Linux kernel and can be chained to bypass traditional security mechanisms. Once exploited, an attacker can execute arbitrary code with root-level permissions, potentially compromising system integrity.
The security community has raised concerns about active exploitation, though no public mitigation timeline has been confirmed. Details on the exploit and proof-of-concept code remain limited to prevent widespread abuse, but organizations are urged to monitor developments closely.
This chronomaly zero-day lets hackers bypass defenses silently, making early detection vital. For full technical details, read the official report at
Zero-Day Chronomaly Exploit Grants Root Access to Vulnerable Linux Kernels
