Hi! > > # Commits from @umn.edu addresses have been found to be submitted in "bad > > # faith" to try to test the kernel community's ability to review "known > > # malicious" changes. > > I would agree that the phrasing here is sub-optimal in that it could > more clearly separate a few related things (e.g. "malicious change" vs > "valid fix"). If I were writing this, I would have said something along > the lines of: > > Commits from UMN authors have been found to be submitted with intentional > flaws to try to test the kernel community's ability to review "known > malicious" changes. ... > During review of all submissions, some patches were found to be > unintentionally flawed. ... > Out of an abundance of caution all submissions from this group must be > reverted from the tree and will need to be re-review again. ... Thank you. > > UMN apologized. Our reaction to their apology was: > > > > https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/YIV+pLR0nt94q0xQ@kroah.com/#t > > > > Do we owe them apology, too? > > I will defer to Greg on what he thinks his duties are there, but in > trying to figure out who "we" is, I'll just point out that I attempted > to clarify the incorrect assumptions about the intent of historical UMN > patches, and spoke for the entire TAB (Greg included) here: > https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/202104221451.292A6ED4@keescook/ > The report repeated this in several places, and we explained our need > for due diligence. Well, in https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/YIV+pLR0nt94q0xQ@kroah.com/#t Greg says: "Until those actions are taken, we do not have anything further to discuss about this issue." I'm not sure on behalf of whom he is speaking in the email (and I believe he is unneccessarily harsh with them). I could reply to that saying "hey, Greg is probably speaking only for himself there, he certainly can't speak for whole linux community", but I believe it would be better if TAB did that. Best regards, Pavel -- http://www.livejournal.com/~pavelmachek