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This Week in Programming: Should Trust Have a Home in Open Source Security? – The New Stack


When the Linux maintainers found out about this, they quickly banned the entire university from Linux development, before the Linux Foundationsent the university a list of demands, to which it would seem the university quickly acceded, pulling its paper from an IEEE conference to which it was accepted and agreeing to provide “all information necessary to identify all proposals of known-vulnerable code from any U of MN experiment.”
Linux kernel developers do not like being experimented on, we have enough real work to do: https://t.co/vWvtxjt7A5
Now, you might find yourself thinking, as do I, that, uninformed of the ethical requirements of security research, and not perfectly in the know of how these sorts of things work, that it illuminates something nonetheless. Various commenters in numerous threads point out that the ability to submit a bug of this sort was already a known threat and that proving it could be done achieved little. ....

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How a university got itself banned from the Linux kernel


How a university got itself banned from the Linux kernel
The University of Minnesota’s path to banishment was long, turbulent, and full of emotion
On the evening of April 6th, a student emailed a patch to a list of developers. Fifteen days later, the University of Minnesota was banned from contributing to the Linux kernel.
“I suggest you find a different community to do experiments on,” wrote Linux Foundation fellow Greg Kroah-Hartman in a livid email. “You are not welcome here.”
How did one email lead to a university-wide ban? I’ve spent the past week digging into this world the players, the jargon, the university’s turbulent history with open-source software, the devoted and principled Linux kernel community. None of the University of Minnesota researchers would talk to me for this story. But among the other major characters the Linux developers there was no such hesitancy. This was a community eager to speak; it was a community betrayed. ....

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HW News - Dell's Scummy Tactics, RTX 3070 Ti Rumor, NVIDIA Challenged on ARM Purchase


08:43 | RTX 3070 Ti Rumored
With the 3080 Ti now functionally confirmed to exist in a 12GB SKU, and with a freshly rumored May 26th release date (and 25th review date), we can all declare our boredom of this GPU and move on to the next rumor. The next one is the RTX 3070 Ti, alleged to exist by HKEPC. HKEPC’s Chinese-language coverage cited AIB partners in Taiwan (most of them) as the source for the information. 
HKEPC says that the RTX 3070 Ti will be available in early June. The media outlet said that the GPU will be GA104, which is currently used in the RTX 3070, the 3060 Ti, and some mobile devices. The 3070 uses GA104-300, the 3060 Ti uses GA104-200, and the 3070 Ti is rumored to use GA104-400. HKEPC says that this will run 6144 CUDA cores and 8GB of GDDR6X, with the G6X inclusion making it a higher value target for miners. ....

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