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by Orygin
214 days ago
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A 25 years old bug in software is not the same as a backdoor (not a bug, a full on backdoor..). The bug is so old if someone put it there intentionally, well congrats on the 25yo 0day. Meanwhile the XZ backdoor was 100% meant to be used. I didn't say when and that doesn't matter, there is a malicious actor with the knowledge to exploit it. We can't say the same regarding the bug in a 1998 codec that was found by extensive fuzzing, and without obvious exploitation path. Now, should it be patched? Absolutely, but should the patch be done asap at the cost of other maybe more important security patches? Maybe, maybe not. Not all bugs are security vulns, and not all security vulns are exploitable |
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I fully agree which is why I really don’t understand why everyone is all up in arms here. Google didn’t demand that this bug get fixed immediately. They didn’t demand that everything be dropped to fix a 25 year old bug. They filed a (very good and detailed) bug report to an open source product. They gave a private report out of courtesy and an acknowledgment of the tradeoffs inherent in public bug disclosure, but ultimately a bug is a bug, it’s already public because the source code is public. If the ffmpeg devs didn’t feel it was important to fix right away, nothing about filing a bug report, privately or publicly changes any of that.