A critical bug exposing the root (administrator) password on Ubuntu systems was found and then fixed within a few hours. Open source communities tend to respond more quickly than proprietary companies; however, this response was truly amazing. The quick response shows how open source communities can take action to fix issues and support their users.
Fast Wonder Consulting
by: Dawn Foster
Consulting services focused on helping your company get real business value out of participating in online communities and social media.
Interests include online communities, open technologies, open source, web 2.0, social media, RSS, Yahoo Pipes, blogging, podcasting, and innovation.
The opinions expressed in this blog are mine alone.

About Dawn

Contact Info & vCard:
Dawn Foster
Consultant, Community Manager, Event Organizer, Blogger, Podcaster, Vegan, and Technology Enthusiast
Fast Wonder LLC
dawn@fastwonder.com
cell: 503-702-7223
Add to Address Book
Links:
What I'm Reading
ClaimID: Bio, Projects
Shizzow!
Legion of Tech
Organizer: BarCamp Portland
Subscribe
Favorite Books
Events
Tag Cloud
attention barcamp barcampaustin barcampaustiniii barcampportland blogging c20 collaboration community community 2.0 community management community manager conference corporate data portability dataportability.org. dawn foster event facebook friendfeed ignite ignite portland jeremiah owyang jive jive software legion of tech online community OpenID open source pdxwi pipes podcast portland reputation research rss shizzow social media social networking sxsw twitter video web 2.0 Yahoo yahoo pipesBlog Roll
Portland is Awesome
/Message
451 CAOS Theory
Alexander Muse
Apophenia
Avant Game
Beer and Blog
Below the Bottom Line
Best Engaging Online Communities
Community Matters
Confused of Calcutta
Dyepot, Teapot
FactoryCity
FeverBee
HorsePigCow
Identity Woman
JanRain Blog
Jive Talks
Lessig Blog
Marshall Kirkpatrick
Metafluence
Monk Chips
Online Community Report
O'Reilly Radar
People Over Process
Ross Mayfield
Rough Type
Scott Kveton
Sigler Design
Silicon Florist
TechCrunch
Techsploitation
Tecosystems
Tiny Screenfuls
Unit Structures
/Message
451 CAOS Theory
Alexander Muse
Apophenia
Avant Game
Beer and Blog
Below the Bottom Line
Best Engaging Online Communities
Community Matters
Confused of Calcutta
Dyepot, Teapot
FactoryCity
FeverBee
HorsePigCow
Identity Woman
JanRain Blog
Jive Talks
Lessig Blog
Marshall Kirkpatrick
Metafluence
Monk Chips
Online Community Report
O'Reilly Radar
People Over Process
Ross Mayfield
Rough Type
Scott Kveton
Sigler Design
Silicon Florist
TechCrunch
Techsploitation
Tecosystems
Tiny Screenfuls
Unit Structures

Blog RSS Feed (recommended)





OpenID at ClaimID






Greetings!
I agree with you that the response time was commendable, typical of the open source community, and certainly superior to any company I can think of. But one nagging question troubles me at the back of my mind:
This release came out in October ‘05. How long have the black hats been quietly harvesting root passwords from production servers with sensitive data, before this problem became public knowledge?
Please don’t get me wrong; I’m using Linux as I post this. I would equally (well ok, probably more so, LOL) slam Microsoft for a snafu of this magnitude. I’m a huge proponent of open source and software freedom. But I’ve become wary of K/Ubuntu specifically, because this is not the first big problem I’ve seen with 5.10. I worry that they are starting to get sloppy.
On other subjects… it’s always a joy to run across other women out there who are into technology, and open source specifically. I’m still reading, but am already getting a wealth of great info from your blog. Thank you for taking the time to put it all together.
Cheers!
Lisa
Hardcore technology fanatic, LinuxChix member, and happy vegan.
Thanks for the comments, and I am happy that you are enjoying my blog. It is great to meet another female open source advocate (especially a vegan!)