Comment by raw_anon_1111 2 months ago Do you personally go through every line of source code for your Linux distribution? 7 comments raw_anon_1111 Reply zrm 2 months ago That's not the relevant part. The relevant part is, if you find it's doing something you don't want it to be doing, can you read and modify the code that does that? izacus 2 months ago So you're not. wkat4242 2 months ago No but many people do. Try getting something by Linus and his kernel team lol. Good luck! raw_anon_1111 2 months ago There have been many long live security issues that have been in popular open source software - including Linux wkat4242 2 months ago Yes sure but not intentional ones. 1 reply → ajvs 2 months ago Do you do that for Android?
zrm 2 months ago That's not the relevant part. The relevant part is, if you find it's doing something you don't want it to be doing, can you read and modify the code that does that? izacus 2 months ago So you're not.
wkat4242 2 months ago No but many people do. Try getting something by Linus and his kernel team lol. Good luck! raw_anon_1111 2 months ago There have been many long live security issues that have been in popular open source software - including Linux wkat4242 2 months ago Yes sure but not intentional ones. 1 reply →
raw_anon_1111 2 months ago There have been many long live security issues that have been in popular open source software - including Linux wkat4242 2 months ago Yes sure but not intentional ones. 1 reply →
That's not the relevant part. The relevant part is, if you find it's doing something you don't want it to be doing, can you read and modify the code that does that?
So you're not.
No but many people do. Try getting something by Linus and his kernel team lol. Good luck!
There have been many long live security issues that have been in popular open source software - including Linux
Yes sure but not intentional ones.
1 reply →
Do you do that for Android?