On 31/03/2024 13:03, Kevin Kofler via devel wrote:
This 2FA nonsense needs to stop! GitHub has enforced compulsory 2FA
for
contributors for a while, starting with "important" projects, then getting
stricter and stricter. It has done absolutely nothing to stop this attack.
How could it, when the backdoor was apparently introduced by the authorized
maintainer? (Or if not, the attacker must have had access to their 2FA
secret as well.) So, 2FA DOES NOT SOLVE THIS PROBLEM! STOP FORCING 2FA ON
US! And especially DO NOT abuse this incident as an excuse to force 2FA down
our throats, since 2FA DOES NOT SOLVE THIS PROBLEM. Sorry for being
repetitive, but you were, too. THIS 2FA NONSENSE NEEDS TO STOP!
2FA for Fedora packagers doesn't solve *this* issue, but that wasn't
Adam's point. What Adam is saying is that we're in danger of focusing
too much on a specific issue while we should spent our time and energy
on the general security aspect of Fedora. 2FA isn't nonsense, it
strengthens security by a lot. A compromised (proven)packager account
can do a lot of harm and can take a while to be noticed. If this would
happen to us, Fedora's reputation would tank immediately. Mint is still
regarded as a insecure distro (in my circles) for things that happened
before I even entered the linux scene...
Like it or not, this is 2024 and passwords are not as secure as they
used to be. Yelling about it isn't going to solve anything. Meanwhile,
enabling 2FA helps A LOT even if used incorrectly (e.g. storing it in
the same keepassxc database).
--
Arthur Bols
fas/irc: principis