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80 points
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And due to open source, it was still caught within a month. Nothing could ever convince me more than that how secure FOSS can be.

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95 points

Idk if that’s the right takeaway, more like ‘oh shit there’s probably many of these long con contributors out there, and we just happened to catch this one because it was a little sloppy due to the 0.5s thing’

This shit got merged. Binary blobs and hex digit replacements. Into low level code that many things use. Just imagine how often there’s no oversight at all

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49 points

Yes, and the moment this broke other project maintainers are working on finding exploits now. They read the same news we do and have those same concerns.

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22 points

Very generous to imagine that maintainers have so much time on their hands

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19 points

I wonder if anyone is doing large scale searches for source releases that differ in meaningful ways from their corresponding public repos.

It’s probably tough due to autotools and that sort of thing.

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28 points

I was literally compiling this library a few nights ago and didn’t catch shit. We caught this one but I’m sure there’s a bunch of “bugs” we’ve squashes over the years long after they were introduced that were working just as intended like this one.

The real scary thing to me is the notion this was state sponsored and how many things like this might be hanging out in proprietary software for years on end.

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11 points

Can be, but isn’t necessarily.

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8 points

Yea, but then heartbleed was a thing for how long that no-one noticed?

The value of foss is so many people with a wide skill set can look at the same problematic code and dissect it.

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