oss-sec mailing list archives

Re: handling of Linux kernel vulnerabilities


From: Kurt Seifried <kseifried () redhat com>
Date: Mon, 04 Mar 2013 20:10:22 -0700

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On 03/04/2013 06:20 PM, Greg KH wrote:
On Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 10:12:56PM +0100, Eric Lacombe wrote:
Hi,

Le lundi 4 mars 2013 11:48:58, Greg KH a écrit :
On Sun, Mar 03, 2013 at 10:39:30PM -0500, Michael Gilbert
wrote:
I was getting encouraged by the recent anger-centric posts,
the "what is it that we're supposed to do better?" ones. That
gave me some encouragement that there was the possibility of
positive change, but the "we're not going to make users more
unsafe by telling them about issues affecting them" is a
persistence of the denial state.  That logic completely
violates the known idiom that knowledge is power: give users
the knowledge that they need to protect themselves, and they
will; starve them of that knowledge, and they remain
vulnerable.

That's a load of crap.

Seriously, you know it only benefits the "bad guys" if I were
to say, "This patch just went into Linus's tree that fixes a
security problem that you can exploit in this manner".  No user
would have a chance to fix their systems before the
vulnerability was added to the "ultra-sploit" tool and everyone
would have their systems trashed.

I think there's a difference between disclosing the vulnerability
and disclosing it with a related exploit. The first one allows to
fulfill what Michael Gilbert explains without the consequences
that you focus on.

You really think there is a difference?  I assert that there is
none, and history has shown that this is the case, but feel free to
prove me wrong.

And as Michael Gilbert insisted on, I deeply think that the
asymmetry of the problem should be taken into account for
defining the way of dealing with security flaws.

Then why do we even have the linux-distros list at all?

greg k-h

It's not just for kernel vulns? At this point I literally don't
understand the conversation, it appears some people have theoretical
concerns about openness/etc. but I'm not seeing anything remotely
evidence based to support their positions. OTOH we have the kernel
devs like Greg who are making arguments based on past
behaviour/evidence of basically what works/what doesn't work. I should
note that the standards and current processes have worked quite well
AFAIK (I've only really been tracking Linux security closely for 14
years now, prior to summer of 1999 I can't really say).

If anyone has really evidence based problems/issues to bring up,
please do so. Otherwise can we stop with all the hand waving, keep
doing what we have been doing which seems to work quite well and let
Greg/etc. get back to work?

If you want to discuss the theoretical/philosophical nature of
information security as applied to the Linux kernel I'd be happy to
set up a separate list for that, OSS-Security isn't really the right
venue.

- -- 
Kurt Seifried Red Hat Security Response Team (SRT)
PGP: 0x5E267993 A90B F995 7350 148F 66BF 7554 160D 4553 5E26 7993

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