On Mon, 9 Jul 2018 at 18:06:12 +1000
Andrew McGlashan <andrew.mcglashan@???> wrote:
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> On 09/07/18 17:51, KatolaZ wrote:
>> Literally anybody can get the sources of the Linux kernel and read
>> through it. So I guess your fears are somehow unjustified...
>
> There were long standing problems with openssl -- the source code was
> fully available, anybody could have found the problems, but they didn't.
Yes, there were bugs. Not backdoors.
OpenSSL is a project that very hardly compares to the Linux kernel:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenSSL
"The OpenSSL project management team consists of 8 people, and the
entire development group consists of 13 members, out of which 10 are
volunteers. There are only three full-time employees."
> The Linux Kernel is HUGE, the possibility to find something that
> shouldn't be there would not be very easy.
However, all the backdoors I know of were found in proprietary software
(like Cisco) or in Linux-running comsumer networking appliances operated
with the admin default password or left unpatched for years.
> Binary blobs remain the
> most "risky" components, but anything else can easily hide in plain sigh
> t.
Actually the Linux kernel is the most scrutinized and secure piece of
software that's around. There's no way a few people could make it more
secure than it already is by forking it.
Alessandro