Linuxgram 🐧@linuxgram · Post #18406 · 12.04.2026 г., 21:38
📰 Linux Kernel 7.0 Officially Released, This Is What’s New
Linux kernel 7.0 is now available for download with new features, enhanced hardware support through new and updated drivers, improvements to filesystems and networking, and much more.
🔗 Source: https://9to5linux.com/linux-kernel-7-0-officially-released-this-is-whats-new
#kernel#linux
Linuxgram 🐧@linuxgram · Post #18405 · 12.04.2026 г., 19:53
📰 Linux Out-Of-Bounds Access Fixed For Unprivileged Users With Specially Crafted Certs
An out-of-bounds access within the Linux kernel has existed in mainline the past three years that could be exploited by an unprivileged user submitting a specially crafted certificate to the kernel...
🔗 Source: https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-OOB-Special-Certificate
#kernel#linux
Linuxgram 🐧@linuxgram · Post #18400 · 12.04.2026 г., 05:27
📰 The Linux kernel now allows AI-written code, but you're on the hook for it
In a world where AI code is entrenched within people's workflows, developers of all walks of life have had to draw a line somewhere. Some places will outright ban AI code, while others will fully embrace it, and each side has its advantages and disadvantages. Well, it turns out that the world of Linux has finally agreed upon where AI code fits within kernel development. Turns out, it's totally fine if you submit AI-generated code to the kernel;...
🔗 Source: https://www.xda-developers.com/linux-kernel-now-allows-ai-written-code/
#kernel#linux
Linuxgram 🐧@linuxgram · Post #18389 · 10.04.2026 г., 21:03
📰After one of its choppiest preview cycles in years, Linux 7.0 is almost ready
Linux 7.0's kernel hasn't had the best of release candidate phases. From the get-go, the release candidates showed more commit activity than usual, which sounds like it should be a good thing, but it really isn't. The release candidates aren't where new features get added; it's where features that have been added undergo testing. Therefore, the more activity a build has, the buggier it is.
🔗 Source: https://www.xda-developers.com/after-one-of-its-choppiest-preview-cycles-in-years-linux-70-is-almost-ready/
#kernel#linux
Linuxgram 🐧@linuxgram · Post #18386 · 10.04.2026 г., 18:50
📰 VUMFAT File-System Driver Proposed For The Linux Kernel
The newest Linux file-system driver proposed for the kernel is... VUMFAT...
🔗 Source: https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-VUMFAT-2026
#kernel#linux
Linuxgram 🐧@linuxgram · Post #18384 · 10.04.2026 г., 18:38
📰 Linux 2026 "Spring Cleaning" To Address Some Code Remnants As Far Back As Linux v0.1
A big kernel patch series was posted today by longtime Linux developer Thomas Gleixner. The set of 38 patches amount to some big time "spring cleaning" with addressing some code remnants still around that originated back in the very early Linux v0.1 kernel while some other code being cleaned up dates back to the Linux 1.3~2.1 kernel series from the 90's...
🔗 Source: https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-0.1-LATCH-Cleanup-2026
#kernel#linux
Linuxgram 🐧@linuxgram · Post #18381 · 10.04.2026 г., 16:40
📰 Is a Clanker Being Used to Carry Out AI Fuzzing in the Linux Kernel?
Greg Kroah-Hartman appears to be running AI-assisted fuzzing on the kernel. Don't outrage yet, as this may not be a bad thing.
🔗 Source: https://feed.itsfoss.com/link/24361/17316958/linux-kernel-ai-fuzzing
#kernel#linux
Linuxgram 🐧@linuxgram · Post #18378 · 10.04.2026 г., 13:13
📰 More SpacemiT K3 RVA23 SoC Functionality Expected For Linux 7.1
The SpacemiT K3 is exciting as one of the first RISC-V RVA23 designs coming to market. For the Linux 7.0 kernel there is initial K3 support in the mainline kernel while the upcoming Linux 7.1 merge window is expected to land more K3 enablement...
🔗 Source: https://www.phoronix.com/news/More-SpacemiT-K3-For-Linux-7.1
#kernel#linux
Linuxgram 🐧@linuxgram · Post #18373 · 10.04.2026 г., 09:25
📰Deepin 25.1 Arrives With Linux Kernel 6.18 and New AI Features
Deepin 25.1 updates the desktop with Linux kernel 6.18, new UOS AI tools, file manager enhancements, and many fixes.
🔗 Source: https://linuxiac.com/deepin-25-1-arrives-with-linux-kernel-6-18-and-new-ai-features/
#kernel#linux
Linuxgram 🐧@linuxgram · Post #18360 · 09.04.2026 г., 07:14
📰Linux 7.0 Adds Support For New Keys On Upcoming Laptops For Expanded AI Agent Interactions
Since last year the Linux kernel already supported the Microsoft Copilot key appearing on recent laptops to trigger AI agent interactions. That keyboard key is becoming more common but now three additional new keys have been standardized for additional AI integration on future PCs. Merged today for Linux 7.0 is supporting those new standardized keycodes for AI use...
🔗 Source: https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-7.0-New-AI-Agent-Keys
#kernel#linux
Linuxgram 🐧@linuxgram · Post #18356 · 08.04.2026 г., 19:11
📰 Little Snitch, the macOS network tool, is now available on Linux
A Linux version of Little Snitch, the iconic network monitoring and firewall tool for macOS, has been released. Little Snitch for Linux is written in Rust and uses eBPF for kernel-level traffic interception (which lets sandboxed code run inside the Linux kernel without modifying it). The tool lists processes on your machine making network connections, with options to block them.
🔗 Source: https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2026/04/little-snitch-linux
#linux#kernel
Linuxgram 🐧@linuxgram · Post #18338 · 07.04.2026 г., 16:50
📰 Linux's Second-In-Command Turns To New Fuzzing Tools For Uncovering Kernel Bugs
Greg Kroah-Hartman, the main Linux stable kernel maintainer and typically viewed as the second-in-command to the Linux kernel development, has turned to new "gregkh_clanker_t1000" fuzzing tooling to help uncover new kernel bugs...
🔗 Source: https://www.phoronix.com/news/Greg-KH-Clanker-Linux-Bugs
#linux#kernel