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by tpmoney
214 days ago
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> In addition to your point, it seems obvious that disclosure policy for FOSS should be “when patch available” and not static X days. So when the xz backdoor was discovered, you think it would have been better to sit on that quietly and try to both wrest control of upstream away from the upstream maintainers and wait until all the downstream projects had reverted the changes in their copies before making that public? Personally I'm glad that went public early. Yes there is a tradeoff between speed of public disclosure and publicity for a vulnerability, but ultimately a vulnerability is a vulnerability and people are better off knowing there's a problem than hoping that only the good guys know about it. If a Debian bug starts tee-ing all my network traffic to the CCP and the NSA, I'd rather know about it before a patch is available, at least that way I can decide to shut down my Debian boxes. |
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This bug is almost certainly too obscure to be found and exploited in the time the fix can be produced by Ffmpeg. On the other hand, this vuln being public so soon means any attacker is now free to develop their exploit before a fix is available.
If Google's goal is security, this vulnerability should only be disclosed after it's fixed or a reasonable time (which, according to ffmpeg dev, 90 days is not enough because they receive too many reports by Google).