• @[email protected]
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    311 year ago

    Lander’s take at the end highlights a key gap in their security knowledge: while I might not necessarily read every line in package, I am able to audit every line. Since I am able to audit, I can use tools to do some parsing of every line to identify potential problems (CVE analysis is a thing) and gain some modicum of confidence. I cannot audit a binary without serious effort in via decompilation and similar resource-intensive processes.

    Security is not about preventing everything by knowing everything. It’s about picking the path that gives both reasonable confidence that things will not go wrong and strong confidence that we can improve when things go wrong (because they will go wrong). Lander assumes security is about the former while ignoring the latter.

  • Kogasa
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    1 year ago

    Seems the precompiled binary isn’t reproducible. It seems odd that they would even consider this option without figuring that out first.

    I don’t like the comparisons to Moq. The issue with Moq was the use of a precompiled binary explicitly designed to exfiltrate PII. That’s not fixable. It’s inherently malicious. This is an implementation detail that will run afoul of security policies and break build systems, but it can be fixed.

  • @[email protected]
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    31 year ago

    Perhaps I missed it in the article/GitHub issue, but what was the reason for the change? Something something compile times??

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Yup. The binary is precompiled proc macros. Should save a negligible amount of time…