gnu@hoptoad.uucp (John Gilmore) (04/09/90)
I'm glad to see how many people are in favor of security rather than obscurity. Even CERT (the Computer Emergency Response Team) these days seems to be in favor of it. Someone posted that the headers on their messages prohibit redistribution, but that's not true: it's the "Security mailing list" that has this botch. (I'm on both CERT-Tools and the Security Mailing List.) On the other hand, CERT didn't announce the recent large set of Internet breakins (reported in the NY Times), so they are not pristine either. I would like to argue in favor of an unmoderated alt newsgroup for security issues. Clearly, I could've created one anyway, but so many people seem to want moderation that I want to explain my reasons, and see if you agree. The essense of the problem we currently have is control. Somebody in a position to control distribution of security information is making the wrong decisions about who gets to see it. Actually this is several somebodies, and some of the 'wrong decisions' are not maliciously made, but are inherent in the structure of how they set it up (high overhead for "verification", paranoia assuming every subscriber is a cracker unless proven otherwise, etc). Now almost all the proposals I hear for a fix to this problem involve setting up yet another point for control of distribution -- a moderator. Since no candidates have been suggested as moderator (except one self-suggestion by someone), we clearly can't evaluate the moderator's credentials. But even if an impeccable person is available and willing at the moment, long net experience shows that they will not stay in that job forever. And when they run out of time, the decision on the new moderator will be made primarily on who's available, not on their qualifications, since most qualified people will be unavailable. In short, it sets up a structure where the same problem will recur, and in that case, why bother? You could campaign to replace the current moderator of the current list with equal result. There seem to be two facets of the problem: where sysadmins can get security information, and where they can send security information. A moderated newsgroup solves the first (anyone can subscribe to it), but not the second (not everyone can post to it). An unmoderated group solves both. "But think of the danger!" choruses a mess of people. "Irresponsible people could find out about all sorts of nasty unfixable bugs!". In a moderated newsgroup, either YOU won't find out about these bugs, or EVERYONE will find out. A mod group won't prevent crackers from reading the list -- it only solves the second facet. So this "problem" will be solved by NOT POSTING submitted messages that are dangerous. Do you want someone to screen out security problem reports that are "too dangerous for you to handle"? That's what they are doing now, and is exactly what you are complaining about. There is still the danger of someone shouting "FIRE!" in a crowded newsgroup, e.g. posting a message indicating that a serious bug exists in SunOS when it doesn't actually exist, and wasting a lot of peoples' time. But this problem will also occur in a mod group, unless the moderator VERIFIES each problem report, probably by checking source code. That already introduces unpredictable delay and high overhead. Even if bogus reports are posted to an unmoderated group, the problem is only short-term though; it's fixed by having reputable people post messages indicating that the problem was bogus. Each recipient can decide for themselves whether it's worth investing the time in checking it out; there will be no moderator making those decisions for your site. In summary, a mod group doesn't provide any benefit over an unmod group, and it provides an additional point of control which can and will be abused to provide obscurity rather than security. -- John Gilmore {sun,pacbell,uunet,pyramid}!hoptoad!gnu gnu@toad.com Boycott the census! In 1942, the Census Bureau told the Army which block every Japanese-American lived on, so they could be hustled to internment camps. Maximum penalty for refusing to answer: $100, no jail.
lyndon@cs.AthabascaU.CA (Lyndon Nerenberg) (04/11/90)
In article <11054@hoptoad.uucp> gnu@hoptoad.uucp (John Gilmore) writes:
[ lots of good arguments against moderation, but ... ]
In summary, a mod group doesn't provide any benefit over an unmod
group, and it provides an additional point of control which can and
will be abused to provide obscurity rather than security.
Your points are well taken, however I'm still not convinced that
moderation is an Evil Thing. How many times have you seen Dire
Warnings about the Evils of the emacs mailer interface posted to groups
hither and yon ?? These are the sort of things that a moderator
would keep out of the newsgroup.
For the group to work, you have to maintain a high signal to noise
ratio. Sysadmins will only pay attention if they know the quality
of the postings are high. Given the nature of the postings, I would
want to be pretty careful about installing a "new and improved"
version of {su,passwd,ls,whatever} from joe_average_hacker@foo.baz.
An experienced system administrator would know to look closely at
the code before installing it, however the not so experienced
system administrators (the people who this group would cater to)
might not know to do the same (ie a bad case of blind trust). Therefore,
there has to be some sort of filter for bogus postings.
Moderation has the potential to be abused, but then again, so do most
things in life. I prefer "innocent 'til proven guilty" and not the
other way around.
I guess the bset example of what I'm talking about is news.groups
versus news.newgroups. Both talk about the same thing - which one
do *you* read?
--
Lyndon Nerenberg CF6BBM / Computing Services / Athabasca University
{alberta,decwrl}!atha!lyndon || lyndon@cs.AthabascaU.CA