Package: man-db
Severity: minor
File: /usr/share/man/man1/kismet.1.gz

Here we see one man page has been given today's date:
$ man kismet_drone kismet|grep 200|tr -s ' '
 February 24, 2002 kismet_drone(1)
Kismet October 22, 2009 Kismet

$ zgrep 200 /usr/share/man/man1/kismet*
/usr/share/man/man1/kismet.1.gz:.Dd April 2004
/usr/share/man/man1/kismet_drone.1.gz:.TH kismet_drone 1 "February 24, 2002" "" 
""

So we see there is some problem with the kismet page nroff commands.

However, "how dare man-db go putting today's date on man pages", when
there is no way that could be true:

$ stat /var/cache/apt/archives/kismet_2008-05-R1-4.1_i386.deb
  File: `/var/cache/apt/archives/kismet_2008-05-R1-4.1_i386.deb'
  Size: 945862          Blocks: 1858       IO Block: 1024   regular file
Device: 307h/775d       Inode: 314594      Links: 1
Access: (0644/-rw-r--r--)  Uid: (    0/    root)   Gid: (    0/    root)
Access: 2009-10-22 20:36:56.000000000 +0800
Modify: 2009-10-18 07:05:28.000000000 +0800
Change: 2009-10-22 20:36:20.000000000 +0800

I.e., what if you open up some dusty book, only to find today's date in
the back cover... would you believe it?

Therefore the man command should just not put any date, unless it has
evidence to back it up, that there is some connection of that date to
the author's actions, not the reader's actions!



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