On Thu, Jul 14, 2005 at 05:40:22PM +0200, Herwig Wittmann wrote: > This would be very convenient- but the delay that seems to have passed > between the original squirrelmail security announcement and the time I > received the alert via [EMAIL PROTECTED] is worrying: > > The Vulnerability seems to have been described a few weeks ago: > http://www.squirrelmail.org/security/issue/2005-06-15 > > The Debian Security Advisory 756-1 is dated July 13th, 2005.
This has been discussed already in the archives, you should probably refer to those rather than reviving the subject. eg the following three threads: http://lists.debian.org/debian-security/2005/06/msg00055.html http://lists.debian.org/debian-security/2005/06/msg00097.html http://lists.debian.org/debian-security/2005/06/msg00142.html > I do not want to rude in any way- please try to excuse my way of putting > things, but does anybody have a prediction how probable it is for such a > thing to happen again? It's unknown whether the build infrastructure problems will recur, machines do die so it's possible. The communication problems leading to various misunderstandings I hope will be less likely to reoccur. > Is there a role/function in debian that is responsible for reviewing > bugtraq or similiar sources, and is ensured that this role is fulfilled > every day? The security team do follow bugtraq, etc. Filing bugs with patches is a useful thing to do - but forwarding a message that has been posted publically already is perhaps less useful. It's not like there's not enough spam mail sent to [EMAIL PROTECTED] already ;) > Or will there be other measures in place to see that security issues are > noticed quickly for all packages- even for strange tools that > are not used by normal unix-centered developers? I'm unsure exactly what you are suggesting about less popular tools. Sure if five issues need fixing simultaneously the "less used" is liable to suffer if there's a more important bug. Still even less popular tools are supported, all packages should receive updates eventually. Steve -- # The Debian Security Audit Project. http://www.debian.org/security/audit -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]