Heartbleed and XZ Backdoor Learnings: Open Source Infrastructure Can Be Improved Efficiently With Moderate Funding

lemmyreader@lemmy.ml to Open Source@lemmy.ml – 96 points –
Heartbleed and XZ Backdoor Learnings: Open Source Infrastructure Can Be Improved Efficiently With Moderate Funding
optimizedbyotto.com
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Imagine if the governments were to fund open source projects when they need and as such the benefit is available to everyone if they have no money.

In such scenario all governments/citizens would have access to software that is good.

But but think about those poor (for profit) corporations. How can they ever afford to pay upper management million dolla paychecks without milking us dry :)

And think about the children

/s

My country has non profits that lobby for citizens , I wonder if there is enough motivation in the community to set something like that for FOSS, I don't think existing non profits (FSF, OSI) will want to deal with that kind of stuff .

It's always impressive to me that instead of sending billions of dollars to Microsoft, the US government could have had an entire operating system that caters exactly to them. They could have then given back in the form of commits improving the software for the rest of us too.

It was a huge fluke of luck that the XZ backdoor didn’t go in any actual Linux distribution releases.

It did get into a few, just not the ones corporations are likely to be using.

I doubt it would have been discovered this fast and easily if it was closed source.

it's safe to assume there are similar issues in closed source. A big part of the snowden leaks was about how NSA could access lots of data at will. It wouldn't surprise me if they also could execute code.

Also there is stuxnet. But I am not sure, if there were intentional backdoors, or only some "natural occuring" RCE.

It wouldn't surprise me if they also could execute code.

They sat on external blue for 5 year before it was stolen and they disclosed the vulnerability to Microsoft.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EternalBlue

I don't see why we wouldn't assume there is always something similar in their armoury.

I got into a rabbit hole and read the story of the SolarWinds attack. Even as a total layman, what a rollercoaster.

@Hadriscus I wonder if anyone at SolarWinds or Mandiant would notice a 300ms delay. They didn't even find it in June after the FBI contacted them.

Looks like passionate people working on open source projects are more reliable as watch dogs