| > I dont care if the software is vulnerable to CVE-1234567 But your neighbour plugged into a life-support machine at the local
hospital does, because your machine could be used as a staging point
for further attacks. When we built an "interconnected world" we created interconnected
responsibility. That said, I agree with you that products that assume permission to
connect to the internet and update when they feel like it are a
menace. They result from disgraceful, lazy, inept software engineering
and allow sloppy manufacturers to unload responsibility on to users. That is unacceptable and it is going to change in Europe with a slew
of legislation coming soon. But that law may actually make things worse because it misunderstands
the locus of responsibility and trust models. Centralising trust in automatic updates with a manufacturer makes
security much worse in many regards. Solarwinds is nothing compared
to what is coming when billions of connected devices can be owned and
turned into a botnet in s single exploit. Your right to control your device is not to be championed solely
because of your property rights, but perhaps ironically, because that
is the better security model as the lesser of two evils. Please don't say "I don't care about CVE-1234567", because at the end
of the day, you're the only one whose 'care' actually matters. The
manufacturer doesn't care and cannot really be trusted. |