Theo de Raadt on OpenSSH security flaws
Posted Apr 1, 2006 9:51 UTC (Sat) by
man_ls (subscriber, #15091)
In reply to:
Theo de Raadt on OpenSSH security flaws by Shanep
Parent article:
Interview: Theo de Raadt of OpenBSD (NewsForge)
They have the staff and resources to monitor the advisories themselves. They should not need and do not deserve a personal touch.
As I tried to explain above, it has nothing to do with staff and resources, but with knowing that somebody's code out there has a flaw. Even worse, the flaw comes from a reputed source (the OpenSSH project). Monitoring advisories after the vulnerability has gone public still puts your customers at risk for a period of time.
That freedom is absolute when you allow people to take it for themselves and close their own copy and development off to the rest of the World.
If you give the possibility to take your code and make it proprietary then you should be ready to have it happen. If you insist that
this possibility is an essential freedom, not an undesirable artifact, then it must be that you think that such closed versions are not a bad thing.
Other people (notably Stallman) think that closed versions are a disgrace, and so license their code (notably under the GPL) to avoid such things. De Raadt and others go out of their way to let companies make closed versions. So when it happens they should not go mad; they should instead understand that SunSSH users are also their users and not put them at risk. It is not ethical (and it looks unprofessional too).
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