Menu

  • Alerts
  • Incidents
  • News
  • APTs
  • Cyber Decoded
  • Cyber Hygiene
  • Cyber Review
  • Cyber Tips
  • Definitions
  • Malware
  • Threat Actors
  • Tutorials

Useful Tools

  • Password generator
  • Report an incident
  • Report to authorities
No Result
View All Result
CTF Hack Havoc
CyberMaterial
  • Education
    • Cyber Decoded
    • Definitions
  • Information
    • Alerts
    • Incidents
    • News
  • Insights
    • Cyber Hygiene
    • Cyber Review
    • Tips
    • Tutorials
  • Support
    • Contact Us
    • Report an incident
  • About
    • About Us
    • Advertise with us
Get Help
Hall of Hacks
  • Education
    • Cyber Decoded
    • Definitions
  • Information
    • Alerts
    • Incidents
    • News
  • Insights
    • Cyber Hygiene
    • Cyber Review
    • Tips
    • Tutorials
  • Support
    • Contact Us
    • Report an incident
  • About
    • About Us
    • Advertise with us
Get Help
No Result
View All Result
Hall of Hacks
CyberMaterial
No Result
View All Result
Home News

OpenAI Finds Zero-Day Vulnerability

May 26, 2025
Reading Time: 2 mins read
in News
NIST Launches New Metric to Track

A critical zero-day vulnerability identified as CVE-2025-37899 was found in the Linux kernel’s SMB implementation using OpenAI’s o3 language model. The flaw exists as a use-after-free error in the ksmbd kernel module’s logoff command handler. This happens when one thread frees a user session object while another thread continues accessing the now-freed memory, risking kernel memory corruption or privilege escalation.

Security researcher Sean H. detailed his process in a technical blog, explaining how he used the o3 API to analyze specific code sections rather than relying on complex automation. Despite initially stepping away from large language model tools, his curiosity led to benchmarking o3, which successfully uncovered the vulnerability and rediscovered a previously known bug, CVE-2025-37778, with better detection rates compared to other AI models like Claude Sonnet.

The technical root of the flaw stems from concurrency issues in SMB session handling.

Multiple connections can bind to a session, and if one thread processes a LOGOFF request freeing the session’s user object while another still accesses it, a use-after-free or null pointer dereference occurs. This nuanced concurrency bug can cause system crashes or enable privilege escalation.

While the o3 model demonstrated promising capability in vulnerability detection and even suggested more effective remediation strategies than human researchers, it also produced a significant number of false positives. This experiment highlights the complementary role of AI in security research, emphasizing the need for improved tooling to manage false alarms and better handle large codebases in automated vulnerability discovery.

Reference:

  • OpenAI o3 AI model discovers zero-day Linux SMB kernel flaw use-after-free bug impacting session logoff handling
Tags: Cyber NewsCyber News 2025Cyber threatsMay 2025
ADVERTISEMENT

Related Posts

Cloudflare Blocks Record 7.3 Tbps DDoS

US Expects Iranian Cyberattacks to Escalate

June 23, 2025
Cloudflare Blocks Record 7.3 Tbps DDoS

AT&T to Pay $177M for Massive Data Breach

June 23, 2025
Cloudflare Blocks Record 7.3 Tbps DDoS

Cloudflare Blocks Record 7.3 Tbps DDoS

June 23, 2025
US Seizes $225M In Record Crypto Bust

UK Data Law Risks EU Adequacy Deal

June 20, 2025
US Seizes $225M In Record Crypto Bust

US Seizes $225M In Record Crypto Bust

June 20, 2025
US Seizes $225M In Record Crypto Bust

Argentina Busts Russian Disinformation Ring

June 20, 2025

Latest Alerts

Spyware in App Stores Steals Your Photos

Stealth Malware Targets Fortinet Firewalls

Prometei Botnet Attacks Servers for Crypto

Winos 4.0 Malware Hits Taiwan Via Tax Phish

New Godfather Trojan Hijacks Banking Apps

New Amatera Stealer Delivered By ClearFake

Subscribe to our newsletter

    Latest Incidents

    Aflac Hacked in Spree on Insurance Firms

    CoinMarketCap Doodle Hack Steals Crypto

    UK’s Oxford Council Legacy Systems Breached

    Massive Leak Exposes 16 Billion Credentials

    Chinese Spies Target Satellite Giant Viasat

    German Dealer Leymann Hacked Closes Stores

    CyberMaterial Logo
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Jobs
    • Legal and Privacy Policy
    • Site Map

    © 2025 | CyberMaterial | All rights reserved

    Welcome Back!

    Login to your account below

    Forgotten Password?

    Retrieve your password

    Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

    Log In

    Add New Playlist

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Alerts
    • Incidents
    • News
    • Cyber Decoded
    • Cyber Hygiene
    • Cyber Review
    • Definitions
    • Malware
    • Cyber Tips
    • Tutorials
    • Advanced Persistent Threats
    • Threat Actors
    • Report an incident
    • Password Generator
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise with us

    Copyright © 2025 CyberMaterial