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Yes I would imagine lots of those type of services would be vulnerable if they hadn't updated to the latest kernel versions.
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As of this comment, Debian Stable ("Trixie", though I hate codenames) doesn't have a fix in place and remains vulnerable, or at least their CVE tracker shows it as such:

https://security-tracker.debian.org/tracker/CVE-2026-31431

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"Debian Stable ("Trixie", though I hate codenames)"

You can also call it Debian 13.

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I choose not to call it Debian 13 because that carries less context than Stable/Testing/sid. I'd rather not require the user to maintain that extra metnal mapping.

Anyone who knows anything about this subject immediately understands what is connoted by "Debian Stable". I run Trixie on most of my personal boxes and I had no idea what version number it is, nor do I particularly care.

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> I run Trixie on most of my personal boxes and I had no idea what version number it is

It's not that hard to find though:

  $ cat /etc/debian_version 
  13.4
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13.4 since 3/14
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