chameleon-6159370_1920

Episode 291 - Everyone sucks at vulnerability disclosure

Josh and Kurt talk about recent events around Apple and Microsoft disclosing security vulnerabilities. Microsoft usually does a good job, but Apple has a long history of not having a great bug bounty or vulnerability disclosure policy. None of this is simple, but hopefully you’ll have some fun and learn a bit about the whole vulnerability disclosure process. https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_291_Everyone_sucks_at_vulnerability_disclosure.mp3 Show Notes Apple 0days Microsoft Exchange flaw THIS IS HOW THEY TELL ME THE WORLD ENDS Linux Foundation Vulnerability Disclosure Timezone problem

October 4, 2021
matrix-2354492_1280

Episode 290 - The security of the Matrix

Josh and Kurt talk about the security of the Matrix movie series. There was a new Matrix trailer that made us want to discuss some of the security themes. We talk about how the movie is very focused on computing in the 90s. How Neo probably ran Linux and they used a real ssh exploit. How a lot of the plot is a bit silly. It’s a really fun episode. https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_290_The_security_of_the_Matrix.mp3 Show Notes Matrix 4 trailer nmap in the Matrix VFX Artists react to the Mandalorian Glasshouse Universal Paperclips

September 27, 2021
bubble-gum-438404_1920

Episode 289 - Who left this 0day on the floor?

Josh and Kurt talk about an unusual number of really bad security updates. We even recorded this before the Azure OMIGOD vulnerability was disclosed. It’s certainly been a wild week with Apple and Chrome 0days, and a Travis CI secret leak. Maybe this is the new normal. https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_289_Who_left_this_0day_on_the_floor.mp3 Show Notes Matrix 4 trailer Travis CI issue Apple 0day patches Chrome 0day patches CGP Grey Where is the European Union

September 20, 2021
operating-system-246242_1920

Episode 288 - Linux Kernel compiler warnings considered dangerous

Josh and Kurt talk about some happenings in the Linux Kernel. There are some new rules around how to submit patches that goes against how GitHub works. They’re also turning all compiler warnings into errors. It’s really interesting to understand what these steps mean today, and what they could mean in the future. https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_288_Linux_Kernel_compiler_warnings_considered_dangerous.mp3 Show Notes The Register Linux story OpenSSL Release Notes

September 13, 2021
clippy-wide

Episode 287 - Is GitHub's Copilot the new Clippy?

Josh and Kurt talk about GitHub Copilot. What can we learn from a report claiming 40% of code generated by Copilot has security vulnerabilities? Is this the future or just some sort of strange new thing that will be gone as fast as it came? https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_287_Is_GitHubs_Copilot_the_new_Clippy.mp3 Show Notes GitHub Copilot Copilot research paper

September 6, 2021
chain-5090999_1920

Episode 286 - Open source supply chain with Google's Dan Lorenc

Josh and Kurt talk to Dan Lorenc from Google about supply chain security. What’s currently going on in this space and what sort of new thing scan we look forward to? We discuss Google’s open source use, Project Sigstore, the SLSA framework and more. https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_286_Open_source_supply_chain_with_Googles_Dan_Lorenc.mp3 Show Notes Dan’s Twitter Sigstore SLSA Framework

August 30, 2021
bells-2651369_1920

Episode 285 - Open source owes you nothing!

Josh and Kurt talk about open source bugs. What happens if a project decides to close most of their bugs? Nothing really. Bug trackers aren’t a help desk. https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_285_Open_source_owes_you_nothing.mp3 Show Notes Emacs closes 45% of bugs UVI Tesla investigation UK COVID spreadsheet

August 23, 2021
hammer-2660775_1920

Episode 284 - What happens when we DRM power tools?

Josh and Kurt talk about a Home Depot plan to put DRM on power tools. Anyone can add a computer to anything for a few dollars now. How secure is any of this. What does it mean when the things we buy start to acquire DRM? There are a lot of new questions we don’t have any real answers for. https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_284_What_happens_when_we_DRM_power_tools.mp3 Show Notes Home Depot power tools Ray Ozzie’s IoT board First-sale doctrine

August 16, 2021
poison-4380252_1920

Episode 283 - When vulnerability disclosure becomes dangerous

Josh and Kurt talk about a very difficult disclosure problem. What happens when you have to report a vulnerability to an ethically questionable company? It’s less simple than it sounds, many of the choices could end up harming victims. https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_283_When_vulnerability_disclosure_becomes_dangerous.mp3 Show Notes Disclosure Dilemmas @evacide Bob Diachenko This Is How They Tell Me The World Ends

August 8, 2021
metal-2305681_1920

Episode 282 - The security of Rust: who left all this awesome in here?

Josh and Kurt talk about a story from Microsoft declaring Rust the future of safe programming, replacing C and C++. We discuss how tooling affects progress and why this isn’t always obvious when you’re in the middle of progress. https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_282_The_security_of_Rust_who_left_all_this_awesome_in_here.mp3 Show Notes Microsoft: Rust Is the Industry’s ‘Best Chance’ at Safe Systems Programming Josh’s devopsdays talk Microsoft moved font handling out of the kernel Atari 2600 emulator in Minecraft Rate of technology adoption

August 2, 2021