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63% Positive

Analyzed from 420 words in the discussion.

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#feel#might#mandriva#project#repository#everything#access#source#sounds#linux

Discussion (9 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews

croteabout 3 hours ago
How did it go from "He even performed a backup/mirror of several dozen of our repositories." to "He deleted part of our repository from GitHub. (..) [He published] an empty package in the cooker repository, which obsoleted all gnome and cosmic packages."?

I feel like there's a few steps missing there. How does it go from "a new person joins the community" to "he's able to nuke everything"? Sure, he might be reasonably well-known, but in the post it doesn't sound like he was a core maintainer, or even a very active community member. Do they just randomly hand out admin access to anyone?

OhSoHumbleabout 3 hours ago
It's hard to maintain open source software that needs infrastructure. Everyone is a volunteer and it's not like the Mandriva project has the resources to fully vet people as well as have a high quality RBAC and access control system. This guy sounds like maintained a large project, offered to help, and Mandriva saw the Trojan horse as a way to alleviate a lot of their problems.

And it didn't sound like he was able to "nuke everything" - it sounds like he had access to their repository infrastructure (which is reasonable given he was volunteering to host it) and then lashed out.

If anything, I think it's a bigger organizational red flag that they agreed to privately host their source code on some random git forge and not a larger, more communal one. I mean, even if they didn't want to use GitHub (did this even cost money for them) then there are other providers to choose from.

It just sounds like the Mandriva maintainers are trusting and good folk who may be overworked running an open source project and that led to a bad apple entering the bunch. It's hard for me to be mad in that kind of situation.

throw1234567891about 3 hours ago
There aren’t, they just don’t write it because it’s shameful for them. They trusted a man who brought two more people in, and they thought they were sheriffs.
hypferabout 2 hours ago
I feel like this is kinda sorta to be expected.

Every time someone actively approaches you with an offer to spend their real energy and lifetime on your thing, It's almost always about leverage in some way.

At least if there is actual work attached to it.

Money alone might be paid by people that just have too much of it or want to feel better about something.

But if they actively involve themselves to a degree that goes way beyond scratching their own itch, something's up.

You might get lucky and find a just genuinely good person, but you might also not.

johnny22about 1 hour ago
expected? how often? We've had 30ish years of history on it it, and such things have been really rare.
pndyabout 1 hour ago
Nearly a month ago AUR malware happen, now this - it starts to feel like there's some organized attempt to paint Linux distros as dangerous.
whalesaladabout 3 hours ago
TIL Mandriva/Mandrake Linux is still around.
jitixabout 2 hours ago
Me too. It was my first Linux back in 2003 and I was immediately hooked. Back then codecs weren't as much of an issue as they were in the late 2000s to early 2010s so everything worked out of the box and the performance on Pentium 4 with 128 MB RAM was phenomenal compared to Windows XP.

I'm so glad the project is still around.

fhn37 minutes ago
"should have" "could have". Geez. This was malicious. Take legal action already!