lemmyreader to linuxmemes@lemmy.worldEnglish • 3 months agoBackdoorslemmy.mlimagemessage-square115fedilinkarrow-up11.6Karrow-down138file-textcross-posted to: autism@lemmy.world
arrow-up11.56Karrow-down1imageBackdoorslemmy.mllemmyreader to linuxmemes@lemmy.worldEnglish • 3 months agomessage-square115fedilinkfile-textcross-posted to: autism@lemmy.world
minus-square@Killing_Spark@feddit.delinkfedilink30•3 months agoDebian actually started to collect and maintain packages of the most important rust crates. You can use that as a source for cargo
minus-squareJustEnoughDuckslinkfedilink-2•3 months ago Researchers have found a malicious backdoor in a compression tool that made its way into widely used Linux distributions, including those from Red Hat and Debian. https://arstechnica.com/security/2024/03/backdoor-found-in-widely-used-linux-utility-breaks-encrypted-ssh-connections/
minus-square@Killing_Spark@feddit.delinkfedilink12•3 months agoYeah they messed up once. It’s still miles better than just not having someone looking at the included stuff
minus-square@corsicanguppy@lemmy.calinkfedilink1•2 months ago those from Red Hat Not the enterprise stuff; just the beta mayflies.
Debian actually started to collect and maintain packages of the most important rust crates. You can use that as a source for cargo
https://arstechnica.com/security/2024/03/backdoor-found-in-widely-used-linux-utility-breaks-encrypted-ssh-connections/
Yeah they messed up once. It’s still miles better than just not having someone looking at the included stuff
You’d think this would be common sense…
Not the enterprise stuff; just the beta mayflies.