Heartbleed may have brought on a major case of heartburn last April for system admins worldwide, but a positive offshoot of the biggest of the Internet-wide bugs was that it opened a lot of eyes to the lack of support afforded even ubiquitous open source software projects.. Shortly after Heartbleed was discovered in OpenSSL, a consortium called the Core Infrastructure Initiative The link for this article located at ThreatPost is no longer available. . Examines the impact of Heartbleed on the recognition of vulnerabilities in open source software and the importance of enhanced assistance.. open source tools, Heartbleed risks, security awareness, system security. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
On October 5th, 2009, around the time of the 0.95.3 release of ClamAv, the popular Open Source anti-virus scanner, the ClamAV team announced that as of April 15th, 2010, versions prior to 0.96 would stop being able to receive pattern updates, in effect, killing the program.. What followed was a blizzard of activity on the mailing list, most oriented towards how it was unfair that another solution wasn't provided, to give people the ability to continue to update their current versions prior to 0.96. The ClamAV developers, lead by staffers at SourceFire, all believed there was plenty of time, and they should have engineered their mail systems to sustain failure of an individual component of that system, to avoid such a thing causing a problem in the first place. What do you think? Read on for more. The link for this article located at Clamav Users Mailing List is no longer available. . The ClamAV community expressed significant concern over the announcement of the version's end-of-life, highlighting issues of equity and available support alternatives.. ClamAV Community, Anti-Virus Software, Support Issues. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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