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    Home»WiFi / Internet & Networking»Vim and GNU Emacs: Claude Code helpfully found zero-day exploits for both
    WiFi / Internet & Networking

    Vim and GNU Emacs: Claude Code helpfully found zero-day exploits for both

    adminBy adminApril 1, 2026No Comments2 Mins Read
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    3D zero-day vulnerability refers to a security flaw in software
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    “An attacker who can deliver a crafted file to a victim achieves arbitrary command execution with the privileges of the user running Vim,” Vim maintainers noted in their security advisory. “The attack requires only that the victim opens the file; no further interaction is needed.”

    GNU Emacs ‘forever-day’

    Surprised, Nguyen then jokingly suggested Claude Code find the same type of flaw in a second text editor, GNU Emacs.

    Claude Code obliged, finding a zero-day vulnerability, dating back to 2018, in the way the program interacts with the Git version control system that would make it possible to execute malicious code simply by opening a file.

    “Opening a file in GNU Emacs can trigger arbitrary code execution through version control (git), most requiring zero user interaction beyond the file open itself. The most severe finding requires no file-local variables at all — simply opening any file inside a directory containing a crafted .git/ folder executes attacker-controlled commands,” he wrote.

    One fixed, one not

    When notified, Vim’s maintainers quickly fixed their issue, identified as CVE-2026-34714 with a CVSS score of 9.2, in version 9.2.0272.

    Unfortunately, addressing the GNU Emacs vulnerability, which is currently without a CVE identifier, isn’t as straightforward. Its maintainers believe it to be a problem with Git, and declined to address the issue; in his post, Nguyen suggests manual mitigations. The vulnerable versions are 30.2 (stable release) and 31.0.50 (development).

    Claude Code Emacs Exploits GNU helpfully Vim ZeroDay
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