• Dandroid@sh.itjust.works
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    7 months ago

    Not the person you are replying to, but my server is on Ubuntu. It was the distro my work used and it was probably the only distro I had heard of at the time I set up my server. At this point I run so much shit that can never go down on my server that I will never consider touching the distro ever.

    Plus, who cares? It’s a server. I don’t interact with the distro. I only ssh in, run services through containers, and add port forwards. Every distro is identical for that stuff. I even prefer old kernel and package versions for ultra stability, as my server can never go down. Sure, Debian would be the same, but why touch it now? That’s just asking for headache.

        • woelkchen@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          You’re literally replying under a submission that’s about unreviewed malware that got accepted in their repo.

          • Dandroid@sh.itjust.works
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            7 months ago

            Those are snaps. I don’t use those on my server. AFAIK, they’re mostly used for GUI applications. I don’t even have a GUI on my server. I wouldn’t even know how to install or run a snap from command line.

            Most things that run in my server are containerized services that I wrote personally. So as long as there isn’t a vulnerability in podman or my reverse proxy, and as long as keep my base containers up to date (they pull the latest base image each time the image is built), I’m mostly fine.

            • lengau@midwest.social
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              7 months ago

              I want to make something clear before I start: the person to whom you are replying is being quite toxic in this thread and I’m sorry you had to interact with them. (They’re also saying a bunch of incorrect stuff.)

              That said - I personally have more non-GUI snaps installed than GUI ones. Including in my homelab, where having the latest htop is very convenient and where I’ve got several actual server apps installed as snaps (postgres and plex being the first two that come to mind).

            • woelkchen@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              Those are snaps. I don’t use those on my server.

              Just because you don’t use them doesn’t invalidate the earlier statement.

              • Dandroid@sh.itjust.works
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                7 months ago

                And that’s totally fine, but it doesn’t invalidate my claim that I don’t really care, because it doesn’t affect me. 🤷

          • Pantherina@feddit.de
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            7 months ago

            It got accepted into ALL distros. Most use the tar release and even those who dont just used the “binary test files” openly published on Github.

            Lets see, it seems very likely that there is a lot more in xz

            • woelkchen@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              It got accepted into ALL distros.

              WTF are you talking about? The submission is about malware in Ubuntu’s Snap repository.

              Lets see, it seems very likely that there is a lot more in xz

              You clearly didn’t read the article.

        • delirious_owl@discuss.online
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          7 months ago

          Everything downloaded in snap is vulnerable because snap does not cryptographically verify all packages, unlike apt.

          Also Ubuntu has newer packages in apt than Debian, which is more dangerous.

          • lengau@midwest.social
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            7 months ago

            snap does not cryptographically verify all packages, unlike apt

            This isn’t correct. Run snap download htop from your terminal and you’ll receive two files: The actual squashfs image that gets mounted in /snap/htop/<revision number> and a .assert file that cryptographic signature data about this snap file. Modify the squashfs image and snap won’t let you install it without passing --dangerous to bypass that check, just like apt-get’s --allow-unauthenticated.

            The problem here exists at a different level: the level of what’s getting signed. Conceptually speaking, running sudo snap install htop is a bit like running sudo add-apt-repository ppa:maxiberta/htop && sudo apt install htop. The package is built by the owner of the snap/ppa, and what Canonical is cryptographically verifying to you is that they got this from the owner of the (snap|ppa). This is roughly equivalent to domain verification for HTTPS (the type of HTTPS certificates Let’s Encrypt uses).

            There are some different security considerations. For a snap, you need to be aware of the publisher each time you install something new. For PPAs, on the other hand, you only have to worry about this when you add a new PPA. However, the trade-off also works in the other direction. One snap can’t just replace another snap on your system, whereas a malicious PPA could provide, for example, a malicious libc6 update.

            These are both different (and lesser) assertions than what Ubuntu makes with its standard apt repositories. But they are still cryptographically backed.