Fedora not "free" enough for GNU?

Vasile Gaburici vgaburici at gmail.com
Sun Sep 7 23:46:58 UTC 2008


I see you can download blag already: http://www.blagblagblag.org/

On Mon, Sep 8, 2008 at 2:36 AM, Conrad Meyer <konrad at tylerc.org> wrote:
> Quoth Gregory Maxwell:
>> On Sun, Sep 7, 2008 at 3:54 PM, Andrew Haley <aph at redhat.com> wrote:
>> > Gregory Maxwell wrote:
>> >
>> >> The notion that firmware ought to be free isn't absurd: It doesn't
>> >> take much effort to find examples of firmware imposing unreasonable
>> >> limits on users, or firmware containing nasty hidden security bugs.
>> >
>> > Just to get away from the ethics flame^H^H^H^H^Hdiscussion for a
>> > moment...
>> >
>> > This makes me think of a really interesting question: security-
>> > critical organizations presumably have to make use of commercially
>> > available computers just like the rest of us.  Someone somewhere
>> > must have thought about the issues of binary firmware blobs for
>> > video and network hardware and their potential to leak data,
>> > either deliberately or accidentally.  One of the many nice things
>> > about free software is the fact that it's reasonably easy to inspect
>> > it for security analysis; binary blobs weaken that.
>>
>> There are two broad classes of 'security-critical organizations', real
>> ones and pretenders. Most are pretenders, they fail to consider issues
>> like this, then when it fails they show that they tried really hard
>> and thus it isn't their fault.  Real ones consider these issues, and
>> demand manufacturers comply with various security standards  which
>> validate the security of the hardware/firmware.  Manufacturers often
>> fail to actually do a good job of this, and can get away with it
>> because bad security looks just like good security. ... so then when
>> it fails the security-critical organization points to the standards
>> that were violated, thus demonstrating the breech was not their fault.
>>  :) :)
>>
>> I've found two blobs I use on my systems, one of them very obviously
>> is a FPGA image, another one is appears to be software for a small
>> micro-controller.  I'm not so sure that the FSF would consider the
>> FPGA image software, but I don't know that they've considered this
>> issue in the context of OS-shipped blobs (in fact, I've heard FPGAs !=
>> software from them in the past), I think the vast majority of the
>> blobs distributed in fedora are software for an embedded general
>> purpose CPU and not FPGA images (generally FPGAs are enough of an
>> additional per-unit cost thet you don't see them in mass market
>> devices). (RME hammerfall firmware is the FPGA image, incidentally).
>>
>> As was pointed out here, a spin could be created easily enough.  It
>> would make the FSF happy, as well as some number of other people (it
>> would make me happy, if for no other reason than I'd get a better
>> understanding of which of these blobs I'm actually using).
>
> The spin's already been created, it's called BLAG.
>
> Regards,
> --
> Conrad Meyer <konrad at tylerc.org>
>
>
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>
>




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