A fresh disclosure highlights a security weakness in the popular 7-Zip tool, stirring unease within cyber defense circles due to its potential misuse for spreading harmful software. Though limited to outdated builds of this open compression program, the flaw might let hackers run unauthorized scripts when someone opens manipulated archive files. Because user interaction triggers the problem, deception becomes part of the attack path – simply opening a corrupted file may be enough.
Earlier this year, researchers uncovered a weakness labeled CVE-2026-48095, also tracked under GHSL-2026-140. This problem lies in how 7-Zip handles NTFS volume images.
Opening an archive with a specially designed NTFS image file sets off the exploit, studies show.
Back in April, someone alerted the 7-Zip developers about the issue without going public. After that report came through, the team put out version 26.01 – fixing the weakness and shutting down the danger it posed.
One way this flaw plays out depends heavily on what kind of setup it’s found in, along with how much computing power sits nearby. Sometimes attackers might run their own programs from afar; other times they simply knock apps offline or freeze them completely.
What makes the situation more serious is how common 7-Zip has become. With hundreds of millions of downloads, it runs on many Windows and Linux machines.
One reason 7-Zip poses risk is how common it has become – flaws could reach millions. When updates lag, experts say, those gaps catch hackers’ attention. Old setups might open doors without warning, especially if archives appear safe at first glance.
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