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Episode 389 - What would HashiCorp do?

Josh and Kurt talk about the HashiCorp license change and copyright problems in open source. This isn’t the first and won’t be the last time we see this, but it’s very likely open source developers and communities will view any project that has a contributor license agreement as a problem moving forward. https://traffic.libsyn.com/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_389_What_would_HashiCorp_do.mp3 Show Notes Josh’s BSidesLV talk Hacker News marked site as malware HashiCorp license change A Theory of Joint Authorship for Free and Open Source Software Projects

August 21, 2023
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Episode 388 - Video game vulnerabilities

Josh and Kurt ask the question what is a vulnerability, but in the framing of video games. Security loves to categorize all bugs as security vulnerabilities or not security vulnerabilities. But the reality nothing is so simple. Everything is a question of risk, not vulnerability. The discussion about video games can help us to better have this discussion. https://traffic.libsyn.com/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_388_Video_game_vulnerabilities.mp3 Show Notes Colossus bug Minecraft Heist

August 14, 2023
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Episode 387 - Enterprise open source is different

Josh and Kurt talk about the difference between what we think of as traditional open source, and enterprise software projects that have an open source license. They are both technically open source, but how the projects work is very very different. https://traffic.libsyn.com/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_387_Enterprise_open_source_is_different.mp3 Show Notes CentOS Stream PR The Most Prolific Packager For Alpine Linux Is Stepping Away

August 7, 2023
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Episode 386 - We are watching web 2.0 burn

Josh and Kurt talk about a new Google proposal that would add DRM for the web. All the ad driven companies seem to be acting very strangely, there’s probably a reason for this. The way ads used to pay for content is changing, but a lot of these giant companies don’t know how to adapt. It’s going to be very interesting times in the near future. https://traffic.libsyn.com/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_386_We_are_watching_web_2_0_burn.mp3 Show Notes Web Environment Integrity Hacker News Thread Island Browser hunter2

July 31, 2023
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Episode 385 - Is open source an insider threat?

Josh and Kurt talk about insider threats, but not quite in the way one would expect. The potential for insider threats is possibly higher than usual right now, but what about open source? Are open source developers insider threats for your organization? Have you ever thought about this before? https://traffic.libsyn.com/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_385_Is_open_source_an_insider_threat.mp3 Show Notes CISA insider threats hacks4pancakes toot Don’t Trust a Programmer Who Knows C++ CISA Insider Threat Mitigation

July 24, 2023
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Episode 384 - What's next for open source?

Josh and Kurt talk about some of the efforts to measure and understand open source. There are projects like the OpenSSF Scorecard. We want to measure open source for some idea of quality. Is AI generated code better than a random open source project found on GitHub? Can we track the countries contributors are from? These are all interesting problems that everyone will have to deal with soon. https://traffic.libsyn.com/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_384_Whats_next_for_open_source.mp3 Show Notes OpenSSF Scorecard

July 17, 2023
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Episode 383 - Is open source dying?

Josh and Kurt talk about the notion that open source is somehow dying. What’s actually happening is corporate open source is changing, which some are trying to deform into something wrong with open source. Open source is doing great, probably better than ever. https://traffic.libsyn.com/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_383_Is_open_source_dying.mp3 Show Notes Open Source isn’t sustainable anymore VORON Design Video of the first lathe Plane Crazy Evernote layoffs

July 10, 2023
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Episode 382 - Red Hat, you were the chosen one!

Josh and Kurt talk about Red Hat closing up the RHEL source code. Kurt and Josh both worked at Red Hat in the past. This isn’t a show that bashes Red Hat, and it’s not a show praising them. We take an honest look at the past, present, and future of Linux. There’s a lot to talk about in this one. TL;DR, Red Hat was the chosen on, and we all feel betrayed. ...

July 3, 2023
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Episode 381 - WTF Reddit, APIs and risk

Josh and Kurt talk about the incredible Reddit debacle. At the center of it all is an API. What does it mean to be using an API and how does this relate itself back to our own risk. Many of us rely on APIs for countless things, and if a company decides to cut off that API somehow, it could create a mess. https://traffic.libsyn.com/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_381_WTF_Reddit_APIs_and_risk.mp3 Show Notes Grimace’s Birthday Reddit’s new API pricing will kill off Apollo on June 30 Cory Doctorow enshitification Wal Mart pickle story Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg agree to hold cage fight

June 26, 2023
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Episode 380 - A new Sovereign Tech Fund program and the BBC on destroying hard drives

Josh and Kurt talk about a new program from the Sovereign Tech Fund to fund open source work. It’s a great looking program with an acceptable amount of money behind the program. We also talk about a story claiming millions of perfectly good hard drives are destroyed per year. They’re probably not OK at all. https://traffic.libsyn.com/opensourcesecuritypodcast/Episode_380_A_new_Sovereign_Tech_Fund_program_and_the_BBC_on_destroying_hard_drives.mp3 Show Notes Sovereign Tech Fund Challenges Why millions of usable hard drives are being destroyed LTT Buys Storage Array

June 19, 2023