On Sun, 31 Oct 2010 13:09:27 BST, Mario Vilas said: > Just signing the update packages prevents this attack, so it's not that hard > to fix. Except if a signing key gets compromised, as happened to one Linux vendor recently, causing a lot of kerfluffle... Setting up a proper signing system involves a certain amount of actual cost and effort. And every organization that produces code, be it for-profit proprietary code or free open-source code, has to make resource tradeoffs. Is there any actual *evidence* that hijacking "authorized" updates is a big enough problem to be worth it? If each year, 5 of their customers get pwned by the sort of attack that Evilgrade does, but 50,000 get pwned by "click here" popups that code signing won't do squat to prevent, is it really worth their time and effort? Sure, sucks to be one of the 5, but if they instead spend the resources to do something *else* to make their customer's lives better that would benefit thousands rather than the 5....
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