De: Marek Habersack <grendel@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: 22 décembre 2004 15:12:22 GMT+01:00
À: caudium-devel@xxxxxxxxxxx
Cc: kiwi@xxxxxxxxxxx, vuln@xxxxxxxxxxx, vulnwatch@xxxxxxxxxxxxx, Full
Disclosure <full-disclosure@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Objet: Rép : [caudium-devel] [SECUNIA] Regarding Secunia Advisory
SA13040
Répondre à: caudium-devel@xxxxxxxxxxx
On Wed, Dec 22, 2004 at 02:47:30PM +0100, Thomas Kristensen scribbled:
Hi Xavier,
The information in Secunia Advisory SA13040 is based on your own
Changelog at Sourceforge.
SA13040:
http://secunia.com/SA13040
On 30th November you wrote to Secunia that this only affected the 1.4
branch. One hour later Secunia updated the advisory to reflect this
and
you received an answer with a confirmation that we had updated the
advisory.
You should have done that in the first place - before posting any
information about bugs. By releasing such erroneous advisories you do a
malservice to both the vendors and the community. One effect of your
advisory was that nessus started flagging all scanned machines running
Caudium as vulnerable. That, for some people, generated costs in real
money
- all because of your lack of willingness to provide the community
with the
accurate and trustworthy information. Personally, I will regard any
other
advisory from Secunia as unreliable.
If you spotted any other omissions back then, you could have contacted
us again - obviously you didn't.
Additionally, any information listed in product changelogs is
considered
public knowledge. Naturally, we don't contact vendors before issuing
advisories based on information in their own changelogs / release
notes.
Do you find is as natural not to perform any tests to confirm your
advisory?
Also, is it customary to release advisories about non-released or
development projects that are moving targets? I suppose we will have to
forget about the OSS rule "release soon, release often" - since any
bug in a
development (CVS/SVN/Arch/whatever) version will be considered a
serious
security threat.
Also, we are not going to remove this advisory, as it is based on your
own information. However, if you have any relevant additional
information, we will naturally review them and update the advisory
accordingly.
I can see a splendid opportunity to fool Secunia. I will start putting
false
changelog entries in our repositories announcing all kinds of grave and
serious errors. I would love if other vendors start doing that as well
- I
wonder how would you, as professionals, look if it started to turn out
that
your "advisories" are cut-and-paste's from vendor development
changelogs -
untested, unconfirmed, unchecked.
Kind regards,
best regards and I hope you will take the time during the upcoming
holidays
to think about the way you do your work - since it is affecting other
people's work, you are obliged to take every step and measure to
prevent
unreliable information from coming out from you.
And a single note below - please don't take what I wrote personally.
Treat
it as something coming from professional to professional.
marek