• jsiepkes a day ago

    I don't get why this is noteworthy? It's literally a piece of code in a Rust "unsafe" block. If you put something in an "unsafe" block the compiler isn't going to help you, you are on your own. That's why it's called "unsafe".

    Now what is kinda interesting is that instead of getting rid of the "unsafe" block the developers put in some extra check. I guess you can take the developer out of C but you can't take the C out of the developer?

    • aw1621107 5 hours ago

      > Now what is kinda interesting is that instead of getting rid of the "unsafe" block the developers put in some extra check. I guess you can take the developer out of C but you can't take the C out of the developer?

      The patch devs said that they're interested in larger-scale changes to get rid of the need for `unsafe` in this kind of situation, but since that'll take time it's more important to just fix the bug for now.

      [0]: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20251111-binder-fix-list-remove-...

      • undefined a day ago
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      • aw1621107 a day ago

        Effectively a dupe of this thread from ~14 hours ago: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46302621 (130 comments as of this comment)

        • thesz a day ago

          The mistake there is a classical example of why (software) transactional memory is valuable. Double linked lists are trivial in single core execution, need PhD level understanding of everything in multicore execution and become trivial again in multicore execution with (S)TM.

          Rust has troubles with STM because it lacks anything resembling effect system. Most probably, this will not be fixed.

          • dlahoda 19 hours ago

            may you share links to read or vote to understand better and push for?

          • dizhn a day ago

            The URL this points to does not say anything about security. There's an example of a race condition causing memory corruption and a crash.

          • arowthway a day ago

            I hate this bot-detection anime girl popping up on my monitor while I pretend to be working. Same goes for the funny pictures at the beginning of some Github readmes. Sorry for complaining about a tangential annoyance, but I haven't seen this particular sentiment expressed yet.

            • megnu a day ago

              I use a uBlock Origin filter to block the anime girl from loading:

                ! Title: Hide Anubis Image
                */.within.website/x/cmd/anubis/static/img/*.webp$image
              • sebtron a day ago

                Normally I don't mind, but on this page it took at least 15 seconds for me.

                • jraph a day ago

                  It is expressed very often.

                  • udjdndndjdjr a day ago

                    I had an idea!

                    Instead of using this to do some proof of work, why not just get the bot detector to mine bitcoin or something...

                    I mean it is just as useless... And at least the website gets some money back from the raw extraction of data now happening...

                    Edit: speeeeeling

                    • dlahoda 19 hours ago

                      this was the plan, this was the plan. just wait little bit it get spread more.

                      • udjdndndjdjr a day ago

                        Also this is a joke

                    • pityJuke a day ago

                      Within the Android drivers, right?

                      • jeroenhd a day ago

                        Technically, binder is still part of Linux, even if it's not enabled by default in many cases.

                        This "security vulnerability" is just a local DoS though. Annoying and problematic as it effectively bypasses controls over power on/off behaviour, but as far as I can tell from this report, no memory is leaked and no code execution can be achieved.

                        • yourdetect a day ago

                          It's UB, it is not memory safe, so in theory, and often also in practice with this specific kind of bug, absolutely anything could happen, including code execution.

                          Greg Kroah-Hartman's comment is both wrong and perplexing.

                        • uhfraid a day ago

                          yes

                        • undefined 20 hours ago
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