#curl has been a CNA for a year now https://daniel.haxx.se/blog/2024/01/16/curl-is-a-cna/
"One fun anecdote is that companies or governments will often say they need months or years to prepare (CLEAN UP) code for open sourcing. Because on the inside, people allow themselves far worse code than they’d prefer to share with the outside world. Open source code often has higher standards, and it is a great mechanism of keeping you on track."
Says @bert_hubert in his article about long term software development #opensource #dev #coding
https://berthub.eu/articles/posts/on-long-term-software-development/
"Free Copilot in your GitHub account" is the 2020s version of "Free U2 album on your iPod".
Can you find an ITW 0-day from crash logs? Project Zero finds out
The #LinuxKernel's stable team extended the support timeframe for #Linux 6.11 from four to five years:
https://www.kernel.org/releases.html
To quote @gregkh from https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/docs/kernel/website.git/commit/?id=e6083565a79c3d711c1a76d9312b8c00e06b826b:
'" Bump 6.1.y support up to 5 years.
Giving people a chance to phase in the shorter lifespans, if at all possible. Hopefully this should help a bit.'"
are you a programmer? do you like heavy metal? would you like to be *really upset* by a music video?
do i have something for you.
"Census III of Free and #OpenSource Software: Application Libraries leans on more than 12M data points from security tools such as Black Duck, FOSSA, Snyk, and Sonatype, which have been deployed at more than 10k companies"
https://techcrunch.com/2024/12/04/linux-foundation-report-highlights-the-true-state-of-open-source-libraries-in-production-apps/ #cybersecurity
In today’s news: man with zero self reflection goes on lengthy one sided rant highlighting just that.
#Linux 6.12 is out. For a list of new features see:
* This short LWN story: https://lwn.net/Articles/997958/ (screenshotted)
* Two detailed stories from LWN: https://lwn.net/Articles/990750/ & https://lwn.net/Articles/991301/
* The kernelnewbies page: https://kernelnewbies.org/Linux_6.12
See also the announcement from @torvalds:
https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CAHk-=wgtGkHshfvaAe_O2ntnFBH3EprNk1juieLmjcF2HBwBgQ@mail.gmail.com/
'"No strange surprises this last week, so we're sticking to the regular release schedule, and that obviously means that the merge window opens tomorrow."'
{sigh} Go home CodeQL, you are drunk…
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
Poorly documented function: fewer than 2% comments for a function of 129 lines.
Code in question is at: https://github.com/gregkh/usbutils/blob/master/lsusb.c#L3835 if people are curious. It’s as if the tool hasn’t seen C code before…
#usbutils (which contains lsusb and the more modern lsusb.py) 018 is out:
https://lore.kernel.org/all/Zxd0oZefuehqhA7z@kroah.com/
@gregkh writes:
'"For users, the largest change will be that the '-v' option to lsusb will now show the negoitated speed of the device on the bus […], and there is better handling for new device descriptor fields and information in the '-v' output as well."'
So… O’Reilly sent me email today hyping up how my books (really, just the one, I assume) is going to be AI-translated into Spanish and German, with other languages to follow. This was probably inevitable, but I still have concerns.
First: are there no human translators of these languages?
Second: who’s going to proof-read all 1,126 pages to make sure nothing got botched, especially given the technical nature of the content? The readers? Which isn’t even crowd-sourcing: it’s customer-sourcing.