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Linux
Common statement regarding the Forrester report "Is Linux more secure than Windows"
April 4th 2004
GNU/Linux vendors Debian, Mandrake, Red Hat, and SUSE have joined together
to give a common statement about the Forrester report entitled "Is Linux
more Secure than Windows?". Despite the report's claim to incorporate a
qualitative assessment of vendor reactions to serious vulnerabilities, it
treats all vulnerabilities are equal, regardless of their risk to users.
As a result, the conclusions drawn by Forrester have extremely limited
real-world value for customers assessing the practical issue of how
quickly serious vulnerabilities get fixed.
The security response teams of GNU/Linux distributors Debian,
Mandrakesoft, Red Hat and SUSE have assisted Forrester in gathering and
correcting data about vulnerabilities in their products. The gathered data
was used at Forrester for a report that became titled "Is Linux more
secure than Windows?". While the Linux vulnerability data that is the
basis for the report is considered to be sufficiently accurate and useful,
Debian, Mandrakesoft, Red Hat and SUSE, from now on referred to as "We",
are concerned about the correctness of the conclusions made in the report.
We believe that it is in the interest of our usership and the Open Source
community to respond to the Forrester report in the form of a common
statement:
We were approached by Forrester in February 2004 to help them refine their
raw data. Forrester collected data about the vulnerabilities that affected
Linux during a one year period and looked at how many days it took us to
provide fixes to our users. Significant efforts have been put in not only
making sure that the underlying dataset for the Linux vulnerabilities was
correct, but also to articulate the special technical and organizational
care taken in the response processes in the professional Open Source
security field. This expertise is greatly appreciated by our usership
since it adds a high value to our products, but we see that most of this
value has been ignored in the methods used for the analysis of the
vulnerability data, leading to erroneous conclusions.
Our Security Response Teams and security specialized organizations of
respectable reputation (such as the CERT/DHS, BSI, NIST, NISCC) exchange
information about vulnerabilities and cooperate on the measures and
procedures to react to them. Each vulnerability gets individually
investigated and evaluated; the severity of the vulnerability is then
determined by each of the individual teams based on the risk and impact as
well as other, mostly technical, properties of the weakness and the
software affected. This severity is then used to determine the priority
at which a fix for a vulnerability is being worked on weighed against
other vulnerabilities in our current queue. Our users will know that for
critical flaws we can respond within hours. This prioritization means
that lower severity issues will often be delayed to let the more important
issues get resolved first.
Even though the Forrester report claims so, it does not make that
distinction when it measures the time elapsed between the public knowledge
of a security flaw and the availiability of a vendor's fix. For each
vendor the report gives just a simple average, the "All/Distribution days
of risk", which gives an inconclusive picture of the reality that users
experience. The average erroneously treats all vulnerabilities as equal,
regardless of the risk. Not all vulnerabilities have an equal impact on
all users. An attempt has been made to allocate a severity to
vulnerabilities using data from a third party, however the classification
of "high-severity" vulnerabilities is not sufficient: The mere
announcement of a vulnerability by a particular security organization does
not necessarily make the vulnerability severe - similarly, the ability to
exploit a weakness over the network (remote) is often irrelevant to the
vulnerability's severity.
We believe the report does not treat the open source vendors and the single
closed source vendor in the same way. Open Source Software (OSS) is known
for its variety and its freedom of choice amongst the standards it
defines. Multiple implementations of these standards are typically
offered for both desktop and server use, which gives users the freedom to
select software based on their own criteria rather than those of the
vendor. The openness, transparency and traceability of the source code is
added value in addition to the larger variety of software packages
available. Finally, the claim that one software vendor had fixed 100% of
their flaws during the period of the report should be incentive for a
closer investigation of the conclusions the report presents.
signed,
Noah Meyerhans, Debian
Vincent Danen, MandrakeSoft
Mark J Cox, Red Hat
Roman Drahtmueller, Novell
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