Let's assume for the sake of argument that Hans is sitting in front of a network-connected
laptop tomorrow. (Smuggled in in a cake, presumably.)
If so, there's nothing stopping him from submitting a patch to the kernel under another name.
It's not as if new kernel patches have to be gpg signed with a known-good key. If the patch is
reviewed and judged to be good and signed-off-on by a lieutenant, it will get into the kernel.
If the fact that this can happen spooks corporations or the general public, then well, they've
not been paying attention.
Posted Apr 30, 2008 8:03 UTC (Wed) by njs (subscriber, #40338)
[Link]
Well, sure, but... it's pretty clear that Shem only has problems because he (she?) makes a
point of being *obviously* pseudonymous. If Shem used, I dunno, "Robert Hines" as a pseudonym
instead, then no-one would have ever looked twice before accepting the patches.