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by Avamander
48 days ago
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This is the effect of "every vulnerability is a bug" and "we can't rate the severity of any vulnerabilities". Which very clearly results in "bugfixes" (security patches) not making it everywhere in time because it's just simply ridiculous to ask for each downstream consumer to rate the severity of everything on their own. It's easy to shit on CVEs, some even put out shit CVEs, but at the same time contribute absolutely nothing towards providing a better alternative. It's quite certain that both the Linux project and the Linux CNA needs to take some responsibility and put in some effort at communication and making it easier to triage. |
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The solution is not to tell more people that patch xxxxxx is a critical security bugfix that needs distros to roll new kernel versions immediately.
Major vendors (all the cloud providers) will have security teams that can have the bug mitigated in a few minutes once they're notified.
For everyone else...
Part of the solution is that distros need to stop believing that their distro kernel branches are any better than linux-stable, and use linux-stable and engage with the linux-stable list and patchsets if they're concerned about what's going into them.
Part of the solution is each distro needs a process for pushing critical updates (module blacklists, ebpf patches) to address things like this without forcing all distro users to reboot, which many won't do promptly anyway.