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this post was submitted on 23 Aug 2024
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Summary of Linus Torvalds and Dirk Hohndel's Conversation at Open Source Summit China Key points discussed by Torvalds and Hohndel:
Overall, the conversation highlighted the ongoing evolution of the Linux kernel, the importance of security and updates, and the potential impact of emerging technologies like AI on open-source development.
You heard it here first folks. Linus said that AI is saving Linux, since it's in NVIDIA's interest to support the OS and AI will make Linux adoption less of a boogeyman.
Just remember, Linus said it not me!
Edit: not to imply that I said, or believe this. I'm just kind of surprised that he would (although the NVIDIA point seems spot on)
openQA from SUSE is proof that advanced automation tools can be extremely useful to developers. It would not be surprising if "AI" hardware and software is used for this and things like it in the future.
I don't know how he can still maintain this clearly insane stance. Pride?
This is a good sign at least!
Definitely agree here. One thing I really liked that I saw a while ago is colour coding code based on how "surprising" each token was to the LLM, the idea being bugs would be more surprising. Neat idea. It didn't seem to actually work very well but maybe it could be improved.
Biggest issue I have is that no company I've worked for is ever going to be ok with sending our code to some AI company's servers, and the options for local models are super limited. So I can't actually use any of this stuff except for hobbies.
How else should it be handled?
Should what be handled? Security vulnerabilities? Here's how you should handle security bugs differently to other bugs:
Report them separately and clearly. Don't hide by omission the fact that they are security bugs (common practice in Linux apparently). Coordinate with major vendors how to push fixes.
They are generally more important than other bugs so you should put more effort into detecting and preventing them. E.g. using fuzzing, sandboxing, formal methods, safer languages, safety annotations, etc.
They have high value on the grey market and people actively try to create them, so you need to design your system under that assumption. An obvious thing to do is software isolation so a bug in - to pick a random example
xz
- can't bring down ssh. Software isolation, microkernels, sandboxing etc. help with this.There's no way you can say "they're just bugs". Maybe in the 80s. It's not the 80s.
That's exactly how it works. Vulnerability found, reported and fixed in secret and when everything is in place everyone is informed to update.
I don't want to sound condescending, but what do you think all this talk about Rust and AI tools is about?
In the end you want to prevent all bugs from happening. Some filesystem bug randomly deleting data can be just as catastrophic as remote code execution.
And if some feature turns out to be a gaping security hole you'll quickly see it turn into a bug. That's what the quote is about. Every security issue is a bug so it has to be handled like a bug and squashed.
Priority in bugs exist independent of them being security related or something else. A critical bug will always get the highest priority fix.
Yeah I am aware. It's very good that they're looking at it and great that Linus is supportive and not a stuck-in-the-mud. Doesn't invalidate my comment thought. He's still saying security bugs are no worse than other bugs.
I mean... I don't think that's what he's saying. Nobody is saying not to fix security bugs...