OK - I need to make very clear that I'm speaking for myself and NOT F5, OK? OK.
Ask yourself why this matters? What is the big deal about having a CVE assigned? A CVE is just a unique identifier for a vulnerability so that everyone can refer to the same thing. It helps get word out to users who might be impacted, and we know there are sites using this feature in production - experimental or not. This wasn't dictating what could or could not go into the code - my understanding was the vuln wasn't even in his code, but from another contributor. So, honestly, how does issuing the CVEs impact his work, at all?
That's what I, personally, don't understand. At a functional level, this really has no impact on his work or him personally. This is just documentation of an existing issue and a fix which had to be made, and was being made, CVE or no CVE. And this is worth a fork?
What you're suggesting is the best thing to do is to allow one developer to dictate what should or should not be disclosed to the user base, based on their personal feelings and not an analysis of the impact of that vulnerability on said user base? And if they're inflexible in their view and no compromise can be reached then that's OK?
Sometimes there's just no good compromise to be reached and you end up with one person on one side, and a lot of other people on the other, and if that one person just refuses to budge then it is what it is. Rational people can agree to disagree. In my career there have been many times when I have disagreed with a decision, and I could either make peace with it or I could polish my resume. To me it seems a drastic step to take over something as frankly innocuous as assigning a CVE to an acknowledged vulnerability. Clearly he felt differently, and strongly, on the matter. Maybe he is just very strongly anti-CVE in general, or maybe he'd been feeling the itch to control his own destiny and this was just the spur it took to make the move.
His reasons are his own, and maybe he'll share more in time. I'm comfortable with my personal stance in the matter and the recommendations I made; they conform with my personal and professional morals and ethics. I'm sorry it came to this, but I would not change my recommendation in hindsight as I still feel we did the right thing.
Only time will tell what the results of that are. I think the world is big enough that it doesn't have to be a zero sum game.
Ask yourself why this matters? What is the big deal about having a CVE assigned? A CVE is just a unique identifier for a vulnerability so that everyone can refer to the same thing. It helps get word out to users who might be impacted, and we know there are sites using this feature in production - experimental or not. This wasn't dictating what could or could not go into the code - my understanding was the vuln wasn't even in his code, but from another contributor. So, honestly, how does issuing the CVEs impact his work, at all?
That's what I, personally, don't understand. At a functional level, this really has no impact on his work or him personally. This is just documentation of an existing issue and a fix which had to be made, and was being made, CVE or no CVE. And this is worth a fork?
What you're suggesting is the best thing to do is to allow one developer to dictate what should or should not be disclosed to the user base, based on their personal feelings and not an analysis of the impact of that vulnerability on said user base? And if they're inflexible in their view and no compromise can be reached then that's OK?
Sometimes there's just no good compromise to be reached and you end up with one person on one side, and a lot of other people on the other, and if that one person just refuses to budge then it is what it is. Rational people can agree to disagree. In my career there have been many times when I have disagreed with a decision, and I could either make peace with it or I could polish my resume. To me it seems a drastic step to take over something as frankly innocuous as assigning a CVE to an acknowledged vulnerability. Clearly he felt differently, and strongly, on the matter. Maybe he is just very strongly anti-CVE in general, or maybe he'd been feeling the itch to control his own destiny and this was just the spur it took to make the move.
His reasons are his own, and maybe he'll share more in time. I'm comfortable with my personal stance in the matter and the recommendations I made; they conform with my personal and professional morals and ethics. I'm sorry it came to this, but I would not change my recommendation in hindsight as I still feel we did the right thing.
Only time will tell what the results of that are. I think the world is big enough that it doesn't have to be a zero sum game.