On Fri, 26 Aug 2011 16:19:31 +0300, Georgi Guninski said: > ok, there might be some sense in using canonical names, > but why chose possibly the worst service available? "possibly" doesn't mean much unless you have an actual point to make. > from their front page: "CVE®" - remember, remember what happened with the > securityfocus/bugtraq exploit DB? I doubt Mitre has any such plans - the "®" is there mostly so they can take action against people who invent their own CVE numbers. > btw, all the shitty id that should be "used" says: > ** RESERVED ** This candidate has been reserved by an organization or > individual that will use it when announcing a new security problem. When the > candidate has been publicized, the details for this candidate will be > provided. I beleive those are pools allocated to the various CVE Numbering Authorities: https://cve.mitre.org/cve/cna.html#participating_cnas Each of those vendors and researchers has a small pool of pre-assigned numbers they can use - so if Apple or Microsoft gets notified of a vulnerability, they can peel off the next number from their pool and use it without the delay of going back to Mitre to get a number assigned. It usually *doesn't* mean people are sitting on unannounced stuff - it means people are sitting on numbers to use quickly if they have to make an announcement.
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