• non_burglar@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      I don’t really see what is so bad here… There was disclosure of type, but no reference to the exact code. This gives the maintainer a chance to reach out for specifics before bad actors can make a pseudo-zero day.

      Is it the language you object to?

      • warm@kbin.earth
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        41 minutes ago

        The entire attitude is shit. Could just contact the developers as outlined, instead of being a prude about it for some clout.

    • Jul (they/she)@piefed.blahaj.zone
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      1 hour ago

      Edit: I hate to remove comments and it may get me banned but due to the hate speech I’m receiving regarding things unrelated to software while trying to sympathize with a frustrated security researcher who got caught up in unnecessary bureaucracy when taken en masse, I’m going to remove these comments for now. This is why we volunteer FOSS engineers have to stay clear of popular projects I guess.

        • Jul (they/she)@piefed.blahaj.zone
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          1 hour ago

          Edit: I hate to remove comments and it may get me banned but due to the hate speech I’m receiving regarding things unrelated to software while trying to sympathize with a frustrated security researcher who got caught up in unnecessary bureaucracy when taken en masse, I’m going to remove these comments for now. This is why we volunteer FOSS engineers have to stay clear of popular projects I guess.

          • Erm, did you read them? The policies aren’t complex at all, just submit the issue (and proposed fix if there is one) through a secure channel, that they’re happy to help set up. If you want to disclose the vulnerability, just wait until the embargo passes so there’s time to fix and have users update. There’s not really anything else you need to do here. This is pretty standard stuff that this person just seemed too lazy to participate in.

            Of the three fixes submitted, only a single one was closed since it didn’t seem very major and would be a breaking change (which shouldn’t be made without prior discussion). The other two are still open, and a maintainer is helping to add tests for the fixes (since the author didn’t add them). The only comment that was somewhat negative was that security fixes should preferably follow the established guidelines. That’s all.

        • Jul (they/she)@piefed.blahaj.zone
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          1 hour ago

          Edit: I hate to remove comments and it may get me banned but due to the hate speech I’m receiving regarding things unrelated to software while trying to sympathize with a frustrated security researcher who got caught up in unnecessary bureaucracy when taken en masse, I’m going to remove these comments for now. This is why we volunteer FOSS engineers have to stay clear of popular projects I guess.

          • notabot@piefed.social
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            4 hours ago

            Alternatively, they could have sent the security team an email with the ‘carrot’ and saying “There seems to be fundamental, systemic, security issues in Forgejo; here’s some proof. There’s too much for me to raise individual reports, what are we going to do about it?”

            • hendrik@palaver.p3x.de
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              3 hours ago

              I think there’s pros and cons to everything. That way would have been less of a dickhead move towards the Forgejo developers. But a big letdown to admins as they don’t know what’s up with the software they’re running on their servers. The way the author chose gives some new intelligence to admins, and they can now act on it, since it’s public knowledge. But it’s annoying to the devs.

              I guess I as a Forgejo user am kinda greatful they did it this way. Now I got to learn the story and can allocate 2h on the weekend to see if my personal Forgejo container is isolated enough and whether the backups still work.

              (But that’s just my opinion after reading one side of the story. Maybe there’s more to the story and they’re being a dick nonetheless…)

              Edit: And regarding just dropping the security team an informal mail… I don’t know if that’s clever. You’d normally either follow some security policy, or don’t engage. Sending them other kinds of mails which violate their policy (an internal carrot) might not be the best choice.

          • Jul (they/she)@piefed.blahaj.zone
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            1 hour ago

            Edit: I hate to remove comments and it may get me banned but due to the hate speech I’m receiving regarding things unrelated to software while trying to sympathize with a frustrated security researcher who got caught up in unnecessary bureaucracy when taken en masse, I’m going to remove these comments for now. This is why we volunteer FOSS engineers have to stay clear of popular projects I guess.

          • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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            4 hours ago

            Did you miss this part

            with a lot of MUST/MUST NOT about what I must or mustn’t do should I decide to go this way.

            Sounds like him being lazy.

            • thesmokingman@programming.dev
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              4 hours ago

              Your comment said Forgejo has a disclosure process. The article says the author went with a carrot disclosure after reading the disclosure process and making a value judgement. Because your comment only mentioned Forgejo having a disclosure process, not an evaluation of the author’s evaluation of the disclosure process, it made you appear as if you had not read the article.

              In your response to me calling that out, you offer an analysis. The author is lazy for using carrot disclosure over the defined disclosure process. That’s a valid take. I’m not going to disagree with that.

  • c0dezer0@programming.dev
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    4 hours ago

    … Fortunately (or unfortunately depending who you’re asking), the RCE relies on open registration , and on a configuration option set to a non-default value (which is the case on some instances I’ve looked at, so nothing exotic), meaning that its selling value is pretty low/nonexistent …

    From the posted blogpost

  • solrize@lemmy.ml
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    5 hours ago

    There’s an HN thread about this and yes it sounds like the guy is being stupid and/or there was a communications error. He submitted a PR for a potentially breaking change and it was closed as “needs discussion”. That is, instead of clicking “open PR”, he was advised to instead click “open discussion” and talk about the proposed change and its potential downstream effects. He instead got pissy and started spamming forums.

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47941590

  • Jul (they/she)@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    5 hours ago

    What’s a good alternative? I’m not 100% sold on forgejo either due to some bugs and security issues I’ve run into as well, but I’ve found few self-hosted alternatives that are a good fit. I need very little beyond a git repo. But I like having the web UI for reviewing code and pull requests and basic issue tracking and need that to support OIDC, but otherwise I’m open. I want something relatively lightweight, fully FOSS, and telemetry and all other external communication can be disabled.

    • ikidd@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 hours ago

      Forgejo is fine. Don’t expose it to the internet unless you have to, or mirror your repos to Codeberg and let them worry about it.

      • Jul (they/she)@piefed.blahaj.zone
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        5 hours ago

        Yeah I keep it isolated for now, but use it very little. I plan to expand to try to get off of some other platforms, so just looking if any other options exist, even if they lack features since I don’t use a lot.

    • Unleaded8163@fedia.io
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      3 hours ago

      If I like having a web UI means you can do without it, git doesn’t require anything fancy. I just have my git repos on my server and push/pull from my workstations over SSH. It doesn’t require anything but git & SSH on the server. You can even collaborate with others by giving them a locked down account that can’t do anything other then interact with the git repo.

      This approach certainly isn’t for everyone. The web UI can be super handy, but if you just want your own self-hosted git server, keep it simple.