Hello,

I had the following concern. It's not typically a bug or a flaw but I would 
still like to bring it to your notice because for me, it is a bit worrying.


Here's the scenario: I have a bin file which Ubuntu (14.04 and 16.04) can run. 
If I make a symlink for that file and name it either 'readme', 'authors' or 
'CHANGELOG', I get an icon which depicts a text file. Also, when i check the 
properties of this file, it says it is linked to a text document.


The worrying part here is that one could actually have a malicious bin file and 
he could hide it by adding a '.' at the beginning of the filename, then make a 
symlink and name it 'readme' or 'authors', tar/zip it, and send it to anyone. 
Since the victim sees a text icon and the properties of the file says it's 
linked to a text document, I believe the victim would open it expecting a text 
file to open. But instead the malicious script could run in the background and 
cause damage to the system.


What do you think about this? Shouldn't this assumption of the nature of the 
file based on the filename be abandoned?


Regards,

Yash Khosla
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