• DumbAceDragon
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      6 months ago
      1. The hack mainly targeted Debian and fedora

      2. Arch doesn’t directly link openssh to liblzma, so the hack doesn’t affect arch users.

      • @[email protected]
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        76 months ago

        The hack mainly targeted Debian and fedora

        But on Debian it only shipped on sid. This is the reason for Debians slow as fuck release cycle

    • qaz
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      266 months ago

      Arch didn’t patch it with systemd so it didn’t really affect them afaik. It did hit OpenSUSE Tumbleweed users.

    • @[email protected]
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      266 months ago

      Do you know the exploit was detected in Debian Sid? (by a PostgreSQL developer), Arch got the update (with both compromised versions), but because don’t directly link openssh to liblzma (as Debian), and thus this attack vector is not possible.

      Also, other rolling distros also got the compromised versions, maybe: openSUSE Tumbleweed, Endeavour OS, Fedora Rawhide, Slackware -current, etc.

    • @[email protected]
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      66 months ago

      There was some checking in the exploit to verify that it was being built for a deb or rpm package, it didn’t build for anything else. Also, the way the exploit was loaded at runtime relied on features of systemd that Arch isn’t using. It was a dud on Arch.

      • Possibly linux
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        6 months ago

        And how many people actually use those? Arch got hit the hardest

        Ok that’s a bad joke. The exploit targeted Debian, Ubuntu and RHEL

          • Possibly linux
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            -26 months ago

            You were not the target. The idea probably was to get it pushed into downstream over a longer period

            • @[email protected]
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              86 months ago

              I understand that the Linux ecosystem in general was ultimately the target, yes.

              I was answering “how many people use those?”