• bitfucker@programming.dev
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    2 hours ago

    You said it yourself that it is a community repository. No difference between that and the internet forum. You are putting the burden of accountability on the maintainer that way. Which I would remind you, is unpaid unlike say, github and npm that HAS a financial means to do a lot of security implementation. Yet those platforms still fail to do it.

    Also, humans ARE the first layer of defense. Because anything you do on your device (on linux anyway, and specifically arch) is YOUR decision. Antivirus and everything else should kick in when the human fails.

    You are normalizing people downloading things off the unvetted internet like on windows. Linux has a vetted repo already. THOSE are what people should be using and I’m fine with if those are being blamed. Everything else is USER due diligence. That is why the existence of easily installing malware like limewire does not justify blaming the platform. Or do you also blame torrenting site when they are chock full of malware?

    • sonofearth@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      Fine agree with all of what you say. But still the AUR is the only repo where this happens majority of the times. So what to do next? I am sure the solutions I mentioned in a comment below are not that difficult to implement.

      • bitfucker@programming.dev
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        1 hour ago

        Sure, your proposed solution is a good way to weed out the low hanging fruit. But I don’t like that it may create friction for normal users. AUR was never meant to be a FOSS project on its own with a full time maintainer that maintains PKGBUILD and the infra.

        Like I said before, it is more akin to an internet forum and pastebin more than a full fledged package repository. And to be fair, it isn’t a package repo anyway. It’s like a cmake / makefile sharing site. Building and packaging for arch is just that easy compared to say, debian.

        If people want to use a repo, there is chaotic aur. Maybe that could be the way too. A dedicated community project to vet the AUR. Or the project maintainer itself could provide a pkgbuild directly on their repo.

        Just don’t ever blame the maintainer for providing a place to store something for free and open to anyone. Especially if it is your choice to get something from said place and be surprised that it is malware.