@kurtseifried @gregkh or, you know… just don’t run Linux.
@kurtseifried @gregkh isnt that partly because the kernel devs are kinda trolling the cve community (or rather the weird corpos profiting of the community)?
I mean, every kernel bug is worth a cve, just update your stuff and you dont need to "manage your vulnerabilities"
@gregkh @kurtseifried @mathaetaes this must be a troll or a case of survivorship bias
A CVE does not mean a high risk. Companies should upgrade only when it's worth it, not only because there are known defects that could potentially be exploited. I totally agree companies should invest in automating upgrades, but not because there are many CVEs and always evaluating cost vs benefit.
@gregkh @kurtseifried just to clarify: wasnt meant in a negative way.
This is something you have to do (as you made clear in your post back then), I personally just think that it is mostly work for you with little gain. The "trolling" was more a reference to the "every bug is a bug, [so its also a cve]" philosophy resulting in a huge amount of cve`s being created, maybe not the best wording on my site :s
@kurtseifried @gregkh that's ten CVE per day? 🤯 I know the kernel is a complex beast but that number feels totally bonkers
@kurtseifried While I can agree with "run current", note that as of now, my understanding is that *every* kernel bug gets a CVE. Every single one. No matter how remote a possibility exploitation of it would be. So the number of CVEs assigned maps fairly well to the number of bugs fixed; not to the number of actual *known* security issues.
after talking with a collegue about it I realized that im not the target group for this change, so I most likely misunderstood the reasoning behind it!
i will get back after listening through the episode, thanks for the link!
@kurtseifried @gregkh @joshbressers I mean, they probably did, but we did not knew about it :D
@gregkh @joshbressers @kurtseifried exactly. It is just that it takes time to get all the vulnerabilities shoved in your face
@kurtseifried @gregkh I would assume "current" also applies to supported longterm kernels that get included in point release distributions like @alpinelinux ?
@kurtseifried in this regard, I wonder about the plan of companies such as Red Hat or Canonical selling long term support.
(note: I don't know much about their exact offering, I'm into embedded stuff, building everything from sources anyhow.).