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Ethics, scope, and acceptable use

Acceptable use

IAMROOT is intended for:

  1. Authorized red-team / pentest engagements. You have a written scope, signed by someone who can authorize testing on the target systems.
  2. Defensive teams testing detection coverage. You're using IAMROOT in a lab to verify your auditd/sigma/falco rules fire as expected.
  3. Security researchers studying historical LPEs. You're reading the code, running it in your own VMs, learning how the primitives actually work end-to-end.
  4. Build engineers verifying patch coverage. You're running iamroot --scan against your fleet's golden images to confirm each known CVE shows up as patched.

Not-acceptable use

IAMROOT should not be used:

  1. On systems you do not own and have not been authorized to test
  2. As part of unauthorized access to any system
  3. To exfiltrate data or maintain persistence on a system after a testing engagement is complete
  4. To build a worm, scanner, or any tool that automatically targets systems at scale without per-target authorization

By using IAMROOT you assert that your use falls into the acceptable-use cases above.

Why this is publishable

Every CVE bundled in IAMROOT is:

  • Already patched in upstream mainline kernel
  • Already published in NVD or distro security trackers
  • Already covered by existing public PoCs

IAMROOT does not introduce new offensive capability. It bundles, documents, and CI-tests what is already public — and ships the detection signatures defenders need to spot it.

The bundling itself raises the baseline competence required to benefit from this code: a script kiddie can already find and run single-CVE PoCs on GitHub. Bundling improves quality and CI coverage without meaningfully changing offensive capability, while providing real defensive value through the detection-rule exports.

Disclosure

If you find a bug in IAMROOT itself (incorrect detection, broken exploit on a kernel where it should work, missing a backport in the range metadata): file a public GitHub issue.

If you find a new 0-day kernel LPE while inspired by reading IAMROOT code: please disclose it responsibly to the kernel security team (security@kernel.org) and the affected distros before writing a public PoC. Once upstream patch ships and a CVE is assigned, IAMROOT will gladly accept the module.

Persistence and stealth are out of scope

--exploit-backdoor in the copy_fail module overwrites a /etc/passwd line with a uid=0 shell account. This is overt:

  • The username is iamroot (was dirtyfail) — instantly identifiable
  • It's covered by the auditd rules IAMROOT ships
  • --cleanup-backdoor restores the original line

If you're looking for evasion, persistence, or stealth: not here. Use a real C2 framework if you have authorization to do so. IAMROOT stops at "demonstrate that the bug works."