Valid point Bryan but I think I trust them more than I would some open
source development team based in Russia (Where does the majority of the
Malware come from at the moment?).

The thing is Linksys/Dlink etc... have a brand to protect so if they were
caught doing anything underhand it would not be good for them. I trust they
have QA procedures in place to detect anything a rogue developer would try
to inject into the release candidate for the firmware.

Lets  face it, it's all about trust and risk, maybe I am more prone to air
on the side of caution because of my job. I am not necesarily saying these
firmware flashes are all bad. Please don't think I was judging anyone I
just wanted to point out to people who may not of thought about the risk
previously.

I'll let you test these firmwares for 6 months before I try them and if
your credit cards and identity are still intact I might give it a go ;->



On Tue, Feb 14, 2012 at 10:10 AM, Bryan Seitz <[email protected]> wrote:

> Gary,
>
>    How do you know linksys/dlink aren't stealing your information with
> their stock firmware ?
>
>
> On Tue, Feb 14, 2012 at 07:17:49PM +0300, Zulfiqar Naushad wrote:
> > I understand your concern.
> >
> > Point noted. I may remove it. But for now will try it out.
> >
> > Sent from my iPhone
> >
> > On Feb 14, 2012, at 7:12 PM, Gary Hunter <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > > Just because it is on google code it doesn't mean the compiled source
> can't
> > > be comprimised. I guess as long as you examine and build from the
> source
> > > yourself you would be fine.
> > >
>
> --
>
> Bryan G. Seitz
>

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