Security is quite important, but I believe that audio quality and lossless 
performance trump security for nearly all users of flac.

In other words, unless the bugs affect the lossless quality of flac, then those 
old downloads should remain available. Of course, place a notice about the 
potential for security issues, but let the users make their own decisions.

Personally, I find it important to have the option of decoding my archived flac 
files with the same version of the code that I used to compress them. Granted, 
I'm on Mac (Unix), but I assume that the same security holes are in 1.2.1 for 
Unix as for Windows. Sorry I'm not much of an expert on the security issues, 
but it seems that lots of software has these sorts of security holes. We should 
certainly address the issues, but there's no need to force everyone to lose 
access to historical versions of the flac program. Even if the new versions of 
flac are perfectly compatible, there is still some benefit to having old 
versions that will run on old computer operating systems. I maintain a great 
number of old computers for audio recording purposes, and while they work fine 
for audio purposes they won't run new builds of certain software.

Brian Willoughby


On Dec 31, 2016, at 6:46 PM, Erik de Castro Lopo <mle...@mega-nerd.com> wrote:
> there are still 1000+ downloads per week 1.2.1 windows binaries
> with know security holes. What do people think of the idea of
> disabling downloads of old, known buggy Windows binary downlaods?
> 
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