oss-sec mailing list archives
Re: Malicious commits to Linux kernel as part of university study
From: Silas <silas.cutler () blacklistthisdomain com>
Date: Fri, 23 Apr 2021 23:32:27 -0400
Hello, They issued a clarification as well: https://www-users.cs.umn.edu/~kjlu/papers/clarifications-hc.pdf - S On 4/22/21 12:25 PM, Marcus Meissner wrote:
Hi, to follow the "give complete content" requirement, here their statement on their website: https://cse.umn.edu/cs/statement-cse-linux-kernel-research-april-21-2021 " Statement from CS&E on Linux Kernel research - April 21, 2021 Leadership in the University of Minnesota Department of Computer Science & Engineering learned today about the details of research being conducted by one of its faculty members and graduate students into the security of the Linux Kernel. The research method used raised serious concerns in the Linux Kernel community and, as of today, this has resulted in the University being banned from contributing to the Linux Kernel. We take this situation extremely seriously. We have immediately suspended this line of research. We will investigate the research method and the process by which this research method was approved, determine appropriate remedial action, and safeguard against future issues, if needed. We will report our findings back to the community as soon as practical. Sincerely, Mats Heimdahl, Department Head Loren Terveen, Associate Department Head " Ciao, Marcus On Thu, Apr 22, 2021 at 05:11:42PM +0200, Marcus Meissner wrote:Hi, https://twitter.com/UMNComputerSci/status/1384948683821694976 Ciao, Marcus On Thu, Apr 22, 2021 at 02:55:03PM +0000, David H wrote:Has anyone reported this to https://research.umn.edu/ethics-compliance/reporting-research-misconduct ? On 4/22/21, 3:00 AM, "Peter Bex" <peter () more-magic net> wrote: Hi all, Probably a lot of you know this already but I consider it serious enough to point out to the OSS security community at large. The university of Minnesota has been banned from making any commits to the Linux kernel after it was found out they'd been submitting bogus patches to the LKML to knowingly introduce security issues: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-nfs/YH%2FfM%2FTsbmcZzwnX () kroah com/ They also published a paper: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/QiushiWu/qiushiwu.github.io/main/papers/OpenSourceInsecurity.pdf I don't know the scope of this research, but it could involve other OSS projects, now or in the future, as well. Hence this e-mail. If you feel it's spam or needless drama, feel free to ignore. Cheers, Peter
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Current thread:
- Re: Malicious commits to Linux kernel as part of university study, (continued)
- Re: Malicious commits to Linux kernel as part of university study Michael Orlitzky (Apr 22)
- Re: Malicious commits to Linux kernel as part of university study Francis Booth (Apr 22)
- Re: Malicious commits to Linux kernel as part of university study Eric Biggers (Apr 22)
- Re: Malicious commits to Linux kernel as part of university study Jan Engelhardt (Apr 23)
- Re: Malicious commits to Linux kernel as part of university study Kurt H Maier (Apr 23)
- Re: Malicious commits to Linux kernel as part of university study James Feister (Apr 23)
- Re: Malicious commits to Linux kernel as part of university study Greg KH (Apr 23)
- Re: Malicious commits to Linux kernel as part of university study Marcus Meissner (Apr 22)
- Re: Malicious commits to Linux kernel as part of university study Marcus Meissner (Apr 22)
- Re: Malicious commits to Linux kernel as part of university study Silas (Apr 24)
- Re: Malicious commits to Linux kernel as part of university study Thomas Ward (Apr 24)