Comment Re:That isn't what a CSci degree is for (Score 1) 287
Most of them maybe, but the really good ones are not that. Computing science has very little to do with programming.
Most of them maybe, but the really good ones are not that. Computing science has very little to do with programming.
I don't know the ins and outs of H1B, but don't they usually require a master degree?
I'm a little curious, why you bring up the link to systemd? Is it because it prevents the stack from running on BSD?
It obviously didn't stop OpenBSD. They were on 3.10 last time I checked,
You have plenty of documentation available on https://help.gnome.org/users/ and https://developer.gnome.org/.
You can't stop someone from using the software the way they want. That's an essential part of how free software works.
People have, it's called nss.
The important thing was that it wasn't Flash.
It actually gave me a "less evil"
If employers were allowed to fire people simply because they "didn't wanted them around" do you think we would end up in a good society?
Running 12.04 LTS and updated openssl to 1.0.1-4ubuntu5.12
Which contains the patch.
http://changelogs.ubuntu.com/c...
System is still vulnerable. Seeing this reported on askubuntu as well. filippo checker confirms site is still vulnerable after upgrade
Make sure you restart the service. Any processes launched before installing the patch may still include the old version of the shared library.
OpenSSL 0.9.8 is still maintained. Version 0.9.8y came out about a year ago and 0.9.8za is currently in development.
And what would be an appropriate language for writing security-critical software?
It did affect your laptop, but it is patched if you have kept up with installing security updates. Ubuntu backports important fixes like this one but the version number will still be reported as the base version Ubuntu uses.
Unless you're running a custom version of OpenSSL, like the one on Debian. Ir reports itself as 1.0.1e, but is in fact a 1.0.1e with the specific bug fix backported.
That's absolutely not the case. OpenSSL has a stable ABI within each major release, like 0.9.8 or 1.0.1. This is no different from any other library. They have a slightly odd version scheme compared to most other libraries but that's about it.
Happiness is twin floppies.