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by Orygin
212 days ago
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In the end, a report saying "fix this within 90 days or this gets public" for small-ish bugs like this is a kind of demand. Do this or this gets out and you'll have to make an express release to fix it anyway. I can understand that stance for serious bugs and security vulnerabilities. I can understand such delays for a company with a big market cap to put pressure on them. But these delays are exactly like a demand put on the company: fix it asap or it gets public. We wouldn't have to do this if companies in general didn't need to get publicly pressured into fixing their stuff. Making it public has two objectives: Warn users they may be at risk, and force the publisher to produce a fix asap or else risk a reputation hit. > 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. It does change how they report. Had they given more time or staggered their reports over time, Ffmpeg wouldn't have felt pressure to publish fixes asap.
Even if the devs can say they won't fix, any public project will want to keep a certain quality level and not let security vulnerabilities get public. In the end, had these reports been made by random security researchers, no drama would have happened. But if I see Google digging up 25 years old bugs, is it that much to expect them to provide a patch with it? |
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And if you believe this is a "small-ish" bug just because the ffmpeg Twitter account's gaslighting about "20 frames of a single video in Rebel Assault", then surely it being disclosed would be irrelevant? The only way the disclosure timeline makes a difference is if ffmpeg too think that the bug is serious.