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by quacksilver
230 days ago
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Is that not a problem with how people are using CVEs, scoring them and attaching value to them rather than whether a CVE should be assigned itself. A CVE is simply a number and some data on a vulnerability so that the community knows they are all talking about the same issue Even if you need to be root to edit the files, it still is a deviation from the design or reasonably expected behaviour of that interface, so is still a bug and should still get a CVE. It should either be fixed or failing that documented as 'wont fix' and on the radar of anyone building an application. Someone building the next plesk or cpanel or similar management system should at least know about filtering their input and not allowing it to get to the dangerous config file. Re: Harassment - Can't the project release a statement saying that the bug writeup is low quality and unable to be reproduced? Anyone ignoring that without question and using it as evidence that the project is bad without proof is putting way too much value in CVEs and the fault is their own |
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It's a bug, sure. The V in CVE is for "vulnerability", which is why people treat CVEs as more than just bugs.
If every bug got a CVE, practically every commit would get one and they'd be even less useful than they are now.
At that point, why not just use commit hashes for CVEs and get rid of the system entirely if we're going to say every bug should get a CVE?
> Re: Harassment - Can't the project release a statement saying that the bug writeup is low quality and unable to be reproduced?
If your suggested response to a human DoS is "why can't the humans just do more work and write more difficult-to-word-correctly communication", then you're not understanding the problem.