5 comments

  • ptx 2 hours ago

    Better to follow the link to the technical details and just read those: https://cdn2.qualys.com/advisory/2026/03/17/snap-confine-sys...

    The article linked in the submission is more verbose but less clear and half of it is an advertisement for their product.

  • rglover 18 minutes ago

    Semi-related: does anybody know of a reliable API that announces CVEs as they're published?

  • ifh-hn 2 hours ago

    I wonder if, and this is just speculating not trying to start an arguement, if this sort of thing could have happened in the simpler pre-snap, pre-systemd systems? More to the point is this a cause of using more complicated software?

    • dogleash an hour ago

      Permission and timing gotchas in /tmp predate snap and systemd. It's why things like `mkstemp` exist.

      I remember cron jobs that did what systemd-tmpfiles-clean does before it existed. All unix daemons using /tmp run the risk of misusing /tmp. I don't know snap well enough to say anything about it makes it uniquely more susceptible to that.

      • SoftTalker 39 minutes ago

        The mistake seems to be using a predictable path (/tmp/.snap) in a publicly-writable directory.