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by zeroCalories
812 days ago
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We wouldn't have to change the structure of the project to ensure that everyone is trustworthy. As for applications beyond the core system, that would fall on the individual organizations to weigh the risks. Most places already have a fairly limited stack and do not let you install whatever you want. But given that the core system isn't optional in most cases, it needs extra care. That's putting aside the fact that most projects are worked on by big corps that do go after rogue employees. Still, I would prefer if some of the bigger projects were more secure as well. Your "mindset" is basically allowing bad code into the Kernel and hoping that it gets caught. |
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Not at all. I'm talking about running more and more rigorous security tests because you have to catch vulnerabilities, 99% of which are probably introduced accidentally by an otherwise good, reliable developer.
This can be done in multiple ways. A downstream distribution which adds its own layers of security tests and doesn't blindly accept upstream commits. An informal standard on open source projects, kinda like all those Github projects with coverage tests shown on the main repo page. A more formal standard, forcing some critical companies to only adopt projects with a standardized set of security tests and with a sufficiently high score. All these approaches focus on the content, not on the authors, since you can have a totally good-willing developer introducing critical vulnerabilities (not the case here, apparently, but it happens all the time).
On top of that, however, you should also invest in training, awareness, and other "soft" issues that are actually crucial in order to actualy improve cybersecurity. Using the most battle-tested operating systems and kernels is not enough if someone actually puts sensitive data on an open S3 bucket, or if someone only patches their systems once a decade, or if someone uses admin/admin on an Internet-facing website.