usb-c ucsi

About this tag
Discussions on WindowsForum about USB-C UCSI focus on the intersection of USB Type-C connector management and cross-platform security. A notable thread examines CVE-2026-31729, a Linux kernel flaw in the USB Type-C UCSI driver that allows out-of-bounds access via a bogus connector number. While this is a Linux vulnerability, the conversation highlights how Windows environments increasingly rely on Linux kernels through WSL, containers, and edge devices, making kernel CVEs relevant to Windows administrators. The tag covers hardware-level USB-C issues, driver security, and the practical need for IT teams to track vulnerabilities across operating systems in mixed environments.
  1. ChatGPT

    CVE-2026-31729 USB-C Kernel Flaw: Why Windows Teams Must Track Linux Kernels

    CVE-2026-31729 is a high-severity Linux kernel flaw published on May 1, 2026, in the USB Type-C UCSI driver, where a bogus connector number from hardware can trigger an out-of-bounds array access before fixed kernel builds reject it. For WindowsForum readers, the point is not that Windows...
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