Hi,
I've just installed Fedora 7 and downloaded Seamonkey, only to find that the repositories still contain version 1.1.3. This is subject to a critical, cross-platform vulnerability (https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=389106) fixed as of version 1.1.4, released on August 3.
What's the most appropriate means of requesting an update?
Best wishes,
Michael Carr
Michael C wrote:
I've just installed Fedora 7 and downloaded Seamonkey, only to find that the repositories still contain version 1.1.3. This is subject to a critical, cross-platform vulnerability (https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=389106) fixed as of version 1.1.4, released on August 3.
What's the most appropriate means of requesting an update?
bugzilla.redhat.com is the way to make the issue known. Looking at the fedora-security audit for F7, it seems that this is already known but marked as windows specific.
http://cvs.fedora.redhat.com/viewcvs/fedora-security/audit/fc7?root=fedora&a...
CVE-2007-3845 ignore (firefox) windows specific
If you know this isn't the case, please file a bug report. Include the CVE number and any references that show this affects packages as shipped in Fedora.
Todd Zullinger wrote:
Michael C wrote:
I've just installed Fedora 7 and downloaded Seamonkey, only to find that the repositories still contain version 1.1.3. This is subject to a critical, cross-platform vulnerability (https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=389106) fixed as of version 1.1.4, released on August 3.
What's the most appropriate means of requesting an update?
bugzilla.redhat.com is the way to make the issue known. Looking at the fedora-security audit for F7, it seems that this is already known but marked as windows specific.
http://cvs.fedora.redhat.com/viewcvs/fedora-security/audit/fc7?root=fedora&a...
CVE-2007-3845 ignore (firefox) windows specific
If you know this isn't the case, please file a bug report. Include the CVE number and any references that show this affects packages as shipped in Fedora.
Thanks. Re the corresponding vulnerability in Firefox 2.0.0.5, Fedora seems to have taken the same view as openSUSE, whilst Ubuntu, Debian and Slackware provided patches.