> Message du 11/04/14 05:44
> De : [email protected]
> > It makes me wonder if the NSA was involved in inserting this bug into
> > OpenSSL clients and servers.
> 
> If they did it, someone got a promotion. If they are as surprised
> as you are, someone got fired.
> 
> In the meantime, tell me that gcc is so compact and well vetted that
> there is no room in it for insertions...
> 

This article makes an interesting point, we got to dig a bit more from our 
pockets:

http://www.wired.com/2014/04/heartbleedslesson/

The second point I wish to make is the surprise by which the original developer 
took the issue. Maybe, just maybe, he did not create that flaw at all.

It could have been inserted into the OpenSSL repository through a backdoor ... 
or why would the spies by so interested in hacking professors that deal with 
crypto and whose word is trusted by the masses? Like they did to a Belgian 
cryptographer? Was that fellow nerd a turrist of sorts?

It may be possible that Segelmann did his job correctly, that the reviewer did 
his job correctly, but someone unknown may have changed it just a little bit 
before delivery.


Besides funding projects like OpenSSL better, we should start considering the 
security of the repositories themselves.

What ya fellow coders think?

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