On Mon, 2007-04-09 at 12:34 -0400, Matthew Miller wrote: > On Mon, Apr 09, 2007 at 12:06:14PM -0400, Jesse Keating wrote: > > Perhaps this conversation belongs in upstream gnome, but it starts an http > > session AS the user for the specific directory the user wants to share. > > Other than the knee jerk "OMG http is running!" reactions, what is the major > > problem here? > > We've come a long way in reducing out-of-the-box vulnerabilities in Fedora > since the Red Hat Linux days. SE Linux and other "overlay" security measures > are good, but the major factor is: don't install complicated network servers > by default. This is serious backsliding. > > We can count on everyone applying security updates for supported releases. > (Of course we can!) But, every couple of days someone on fedora-list posts > questions about Fedora Core 4 or older. "It works fine, I can't bother to > upgrade right now." The more stuff like this we ship, the more those people > are going to be part of botnets. > > We can say "tough, their problem" -- just like historically a certain big OS > vendor I hate to bring into the conversation for Godwin's law-related > reasons -- but that's irresponsible. If we stop caring about this issue, > it's only a matter of time before "Linux Security Worse than Proprietary OS > / Linux-based Worm Brings Down The Internets!" is the headline news -- and > it'll be right. Would you be happier if turning on file sharing started a custom-written HTTP server hacked up just for the purpose? If so, why? If not, what's the problem? (*) The long-standing policy is that installing httpd doesn't start httpd as a system service, so in either case, we are talking about a server process running as the user serving a very limited set of files. The only difference I see is that using Apache HTTP, we use a much more tested and mature code base. - Owen (*) Saying that user file sharing is a bad idea and shouldn't have been done to begin with isn't a useful response here. -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list