"It’s important for the industry to understand that open source development burnout is real and can have a significant impact upon those who depend on the projects they maintain. Incentivize and recognize efforts. Don’t just take, but give back to the community." . Whether a software architect makes the decision as part of an app’s planning phase, or it’s simply dragged in by a developer trying to complete a task, the accessibility and availability of open source makes it easy to just download and build into an application without thinking more about where it comes from. But why even care about where it comes from? Any organization that pays the smallest attention to open source management has methods and tools in place to identify and mitigate the risks that come along with it – risks relating to security vulnerabilities, license obligations, and operational concerns. So, if dev teams can keep at bay the risks related to not knowing where the open source software comes from, why does it matter to know more than that? The link for this article located at SC Media is no longer available. . Recognize how open source fatigue affects security and emphasize the vital role of community backing for projects.. Open Source Management, Development Challenges, Security Risks, Community Contributions. . Brittany Day
bit_of_love sent us a note about an interview with Harald Welte. "UnderLinux has an interesting interview with Harald Welte, member of netfilter/iptables project core team. Harald told about his carrer, dificulties in iptables project, Brazil and Free software, GNU/HURD and, of course, the new iptables2 to kernels 2.5.x/2.6.x.". . .. bit_of_love sent us a note about an interview with Harald Welte. "UnderLinux has an interesting interview with Harald Welte, member of netfilter/iptables project core team. Harald told about his carrer, dificulties in iptables project, Brazil and Free software, GNU/HURD and, of course, the new iptables2 to kernels 2.5.x/2.6.x." UnderLinux : Can you tell us something about you, your country, your work and your activities with free software ? Harald : I'm a 22 years old computer geek from Germany. The beginning of my 'linux career' was the necessity of running a gatway between FIDO, UseNet and ZConnect (some proprietary german message format used in the so-called Z-Netz). I tried using KA9Q on DOS, didn' succeed and had a look at linux. I've never had any experience with unix-like operating systems before. After learning about administration, shell scripts, perl programming and unix C programming, I spent a couple of years installing, configuring and customizing linux-based mail-, news-, web- and fileservers. Later on, I was contracted for custom software development on linux and solaris. During that time I always tried to contribute bugfixes and new features back to the free software projects I've been working with. I am a very religious member of the free software community (see also my gnumonks.org domain name). My favourite subject within computing has always been firewalling. Considering this, it's not too surprising that I tried the 'new' netfilter/iptables code in is's early development state during 2.3.x linux kernels. There were some features missing, and I started to implement some of them. I got more and more involved with the project, resultingin me becoming the fourth member of the netfilter/iptables core team in October 2000. The link for this article located at UnderLinux.com.br is no longer available. . Harald Welte discussed his impactful work on netfilter and iptables in a recent interview, sharing his journey and insights on open-source network security. Harald Welte, netfilter, iptables, free software, firewalling. . Anthony Pell
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