On Jun 1, 2010, at 9:19 AM, Denis Gervalle wrote:

> On Tue, Jun 1, 2010 at 00:52, Ludovic Dubost <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> 
>> I'll throw in my James Bond culture here..
>> 
>> The rule should be based on the "need-to-know" rule.
>> 
>> We should let people that need to know the information towards the goals we
>> are setting for this list.
>> The goal of this list is at this point to allow people to discuss solutions
>> to security issues in order to fix them while not making XWiki unusable.
>> I don't think it is at this point to inform "admins" of potential security
>> issue (that should be another annoucement list).
>> 
>> So it should be about letting in people that prove they want to help. The
>> lesser it seems they will help the more we need to trust them !
>> It's clearly a case by case basis
>> 
>> I don't think we should worry about not having enough people in this list.
>> Working on security issues is hard and requires dedication, so it's already
>> a happy few list.
>> We'll recognize them very quickly.
>> 
>> Ludovic
>> 
> 
> I am very +1 with Ludovic, and what has been publish on XWiki.org is
> sufficient for me.

For me too. The fact that it says "contributing" should prevent casual lurkers.

> If anyone not fitting Vincent's rules should be in for
> some other reason, a committers'vote should do, else, I not sure it is
> required, an announcement on the security list should be enough.
> Should committers do something to join ?

I think Alex has aded us by default. Let me try to send an email to see if it 
works...

Thanks
-Vincent

> Denis
> 
> 
>> 
>> Le 31/05/10 18:53, Caleb James DeLisle a écrit :
>> 
>> 
>>> Vincent Massol wrote:
>>> 
>>> On May 31, 2010, at 6:18 PM, Caleb James DeLisle wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> Vincent Massol wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> On May 31, 2010, at 5:02 PM, Alex Busenius wrote:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Hello,
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> The new mailing list [email protected] was created. All core
>>>>>>> commiters
>>>>>>> will be on this list.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> This is *not* an announcement list, it is meant for technical
>>>>>>> discussions about security issues.  However, everyone can write to
>>>>>>> this
>>>>>>> mailing list, e.g. to report security issues (mails will be reviewed
>>>>>>> by
>>>>>>> the administrator first).
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> If somebody else is interested in contributing to discussions on that
>>>>>>> list, he or she should write a mail on the dev-list asking for access.
>>>>>>> If the commiters agree (meaning that nobody is -1 on it, similar to a
>>>>>>> proposal) this person will get access.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> We also need to define who can get access. IMO:
>>>>>> - persons who have submitted security issues in jira
>>>>>> - persons who've submitted security patches
>>>>>> - persons who have been contributing to xwiki for a long time
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> These seem like nice guidelines but must we disallow people who we all
>>>>> know
>>>>> will help the discussion because they don't meet the requirements?
>>>>> 
>>>>> IMO we can't define what makes someone unsuitable for the list but will
>>>>> know
>>>>> them when we see them.
>>>>> 
>>>>> It's much better to have a list of examples of what constitutes a valid
>>>> request than not having it. This is useful not only for committers to vote
>>>> but also for the person who ask so that he knows how to qualify.
>>>> 
>>>> Otherwise voting is about thin air... and you're going to hurt people
>>>> Caleb (+ generate unnecessary requests, votes and rejections).
>>>> 
>>>> Take this example:
>>>> 
>>>> I'm someone who has installed XE at my company. I want to be sure I know
>>>> about security issues and I'm even ok to take part in the discussion about
>>>> these issues. I sent a mail to the dev list asking to be on that list. Note
>>>> that I have not sent any prior email to the list but I have participated
>>>> (for ex) to other open source projects.
>>>> 
>>>> I have no problem defining what the list is for and what it's not for.
>>> "This list is not here to provide information about exploits and how to
>>> deal with them, only ask to join if you wish to help"
>>> 
>>> If this hypothetical admin is also a programmer and knows a lot about
>>> security patterns
>>> then we would be wise to let them in.
>>> 
>>> 
>>> How ar you going to reject me or accept me? And if you reject me you need
>>>> to give me a reason. What reason will it be?
>>>> 
>>>> As you can see you'll have to list the reasons anyway and it's much
>>>> better to do it upfront (even if the list is not complete) than not.
>>>> 
>>>> Also if you reject me I'll be offended. I'm not a script kid. I'm someone
>>>> honest and serious. How dare you reject me! This is not a real open source
>>>> project! ;)
>>>> 
>>>> What if somebody fits all of the requirements but has a history of
>>> becoming bitter and publishing
>>> security info about projects. Then if we reject them they will be that
>>> much more angry because they
>>> fit all of the rules.
>>> 
>>> What about somebody who gets on the list by meeting the qualifications
>>> then never sends anything, just (presumably)
>>> logging the discussion?
>>> 
>>> One final thought is we're probably making a mountain out of a mole hill,
>>> regulating who sees the secret jira issues has never been much of a problem.
>>> 
>>> 
>>> Thanks
>>>> -Vincent
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> Also it seems that rules stop people from doing the right thing while
>>>>> people with bad intentions are usually more motivated and will thus find
>>>>> a way
>>>>> around the rule.
>>>>> 
>>>>> My +1 is for a case by case basis.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Caleb
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> WDYT?
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Thanks
>>>>>> -Vincent
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Alex
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> On 05/26/2010 01:02 PM, Alex Busenius wrote:
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Hello devs,
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> I propose to introduce a security mailing list ([email protected])
>>>>>>>> to
>>>>>>>> discuss details of security issues.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> This list should be private, with only committers and trusted
>>>>>>>> contributors having read and write access. Anyone who proved his good
>>>>>>>> intentions on the dev-list and bug tracker should be able to get
>>>>>>>> access
>>>>>>>> to security-list through the usual vote procedure.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> The purpose of this list is to give a safe place to discuss details
>>>>>>>> open
>>>>>>>> security issues without giving all script kiddies in the world
>>>>>>>> examples
>>>>>>>> to write exploits. The discussions should be kept on this private
>>>>>>>> list
>>>>>>>> until the corresponding fix is released.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> WDYT?
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> Alex
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