https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=216283 --- Comment #5 from Lukas Czerner (lczerner@xxxxxxxxxx) --- On Thu, Jul 28, 2022 at 09:22:24AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote: > On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 01:53:07PM +0200, Lukas Czerner wrote: > > On Tue, Jul 26, 2022 at 01:10:24PM -0700, Darrick J. Wong wrote: > > > If you are going to run some scripted tool to randomly > > > corrupt the filesystem to find failures, then you have an > > > ethical and moral responsibility to do some of the work to > > > narrow down and identify the cause of the failure, not just > > > throw them at someone to do all the work. > > > > > > --D > > > > While I understand the frustration with the fuzzer bug reports like this > > I very much disagree with your statement about ethical and moral > > responsibility. > > > > The bug is in the code, it would have been there even if Wenqing Liu > > didn't run the tool. > > Yes, but it's not just a bug. It's a format parser exploit. And what do you think this is exploiting? A bug in a "format parser" perhaps? Are you trying both downplay it to not-a-bug and elevate it to 'security vulnerability' at the same time ? ;) > > > We know there are bugs in the code we just don't > > know where all of them are. Now, thanks to this report, we know a little > > bit more about at least one of them. That's at least a little useful. > > But you seem to argue that the reporter should put more work in, or not > > bother at all. > > > > That's wrong. Really, Wenqing Liu has no more ethical and moral > > responsibility than you finding and fixing the problem regardless of the > > bug report. > > By this reasoning, the researchers that discovered RetBleed > should have just published their findings without notify any of the > affected parties. > > i.e. your argument implies they have no responsibility and hence are > entitled to say "We aren't responsible for helping anyone understand > the problem or mitigating the impact of the flaw - we've got our > publicity and secured tenure with discovery and publication!" > > That's not _responsible disclosure_. Look, your entire argument hinges on the assumption that this is a security vulnerability that could be exploited and the report makes the situation worse. And that's very much debatable. I don't think it is and Ted described it very well in his comment. Asking for more information, or even asking reported to try to narrow down the problem is of course fine. But making sweeping claims about moral and ethical responsibilities is always a little suspicious and completely bogus in this case IMO. -Lukas -- You may reply to this email to add a comment. You are receiving this mail because: You are watching the assignee of the bug.