Linux 7.0: Google’s $1M Bug Finally Fixed
Google paid $1M in iouring bounties and disabled it on Chrome OS. A maintainer called Rust “cancer” and quit. Linux 7.0 is the kernel’s…

Google paid $1M in iouring bounties and disabled it on Chrome OS. A maintainer called Rust “cancer” and quit. Linux 7.0 is the kernel’s answer to both.
Seven billion devices. Thirty-five years. Linux 7.0 marks the first major version bump since 2022, and this one carries real weight.
Linux kernel is the invisible layer between your hardware and everything you do on a computer. It decides how your phone talks to its screen and how Netflix streams to your TV.
Android runs on it. Most of the internet runs on it. When the kernel changes, billions of devices eventually feel it, whether you notice or not.
Linus Torvalds confirmed the version bump and, in typical fashion, framed it as pure arithmetic. “I’m getting to the point where I’m being confused by large numbers,” he wrote. Almost running out of fingers and toes, he said.
The kernel went from 2.6 to 3.0, from 4.20 to 5.0, from 5.19 to 6.0. Now 6.19 becomes 7.0. No technical milestone. No API break. Just a number.
But sometimes the features line up with the symbolism. The first half of the Linux 7.0 merge window alone pulled in 7,695 non-merge commits. A five-year experiment officially ended, quantum-resistant cryptography arrived, and the Linux kernel got its first written policy on AI-generated code.
I’ve been building on Linux professionally for over 20 years, across telecommunications, digital health, and deep-tech imaging. I’ve watched kernel releases come and go.
Some matter. Some don’t. This one matters.


