this post was submitted on 27 Jun 2024
1 points (55.6% liked)

Pulse of Truth

377 readers
61 users here now

Cyber Security news and links to cyber security stories that could make you go hmmm. The content is exactly as it is consumed through RSS feeds and wont be edited (except for the occasional encoding errors).

This community is automagically fed by an instance of Dittybopper.

founded 10 months ago
MODERATORS
 

A CISA analysis in collaboration with international partners concluded most critical open source projects potentially contain memory safety vulnerabilities

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

Not sure if that is even the point. The article is all about memory unsafe programming!!1!. But there is no context at all.

Sure, there are vulnerabilities because of unsafe memory handling. But I looked for some statistic which would bring unsafe memory handling into context with say the high profile vulnerabilities from the last few weeks / months. I haven't spent too much time on research but looking at some lists containing vulns from the last few months it seems as if all those pre-auth, priv escalation, directory traversal and whatnot very based on much simpler failures like wrong error handling or logical errors or missing code than unsafe memory handling.

I might be wrong, then please show me the numbers, but shooting at C/C++ because unsafe!!1! sounds like a very biased story there.

And while we are at it. I'd also be interested in C vs. (somewhat modern) C++.