Secunia Drops Public Listing of Vulnerabilities
New submitter CheckeredShirt writes: Vulnerability aggregator Secunia just announced on a forum post that they will no longer provide public access to advisories newer than 9 months. According to Secunia they, "frequently encounter organizations engaged in wrongful use of Secunia Advisories," and that VIM customers, "have full access to all advisories." While Secunia is under no obligation to provide their aggregated vulnerabilities they've been doing it for over 10 years. The information they provide is primarily from public sources.
Another bright individual or group will see the opportunity and absorb the users Secunia leaves behind, eventually rendering Secunia irrelevant.
If Secunia is determined to cripple itself, that's their call. The rest of the internet will not follow them over that cliff.
Strat
Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
According to Secunia they, "frequently encounter organizations engaged in wrongful use of Secunia Advisories,"
According to Secunia: "The decision was made to avoid abuse of the advisories for commercial use, and because we frequently encounter organizations engaged in wrongful use of Secunia Advisories." - include that part also from the forum post and avoid much of the "Slashdot drama"...
Antisthenes: "Wisdom begins by examining the words/names." - excuse my English, i am (slightly...) better with my Greek!
and that VIM customers, "have full access to all advisories."
Ha! Take that, Emacs users! ;P
"Set a man a fire, he'll be warm for the rest of the night. Set a man afire, he'll be warm for the rest of his life."
NSL
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
I stopped using Secunia as a primary source a long time ago due to some other issues I had with their actions (I don't clearly remember what it was, though). I've been using CVE-Details for a while now, in large part because they link to so many outside resources (including working exploit code in some cases) that it's just more useful overall. It doesn't catch everything (not every vuln gets a CVE number), but it gets enough and provides better summary data than most.
You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
It's interesting that they've stopped the public from accessing their Vulnerability DB but they've been relying on taking information from other publicly available databases for years........
Maybe this'll mean Secunia will stop sending me UCE, which is an abuse of email, for their commercial reasons?
Honestly, one less generically filled out vague template to waste time on. also aren't these the same people who feed the NSA? that's the true abuse.
"To err is human, to forgive, beyond the scope of the Operating System"