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posted by Dopefish on Thursday February 20 2014, @07:30AM   Printer-friendly
from the penguins-everywhere dept.

An anonymous coward writes "Former cypherpunk shares his conspiratorial view on Linux security:

Since then, more has happened to reveal the true story here, the depth of which surprised even me. The GTK development story and the systemd debate on Debian revealed much corporate pressure being brought to bear in Linux. [...] Some really startling facts about Red Hat came to light. For me the biggest was the fact that the US military is Red Hat's largest customer:

"When we rolled into Baghdad, we did it using open source," General Justice continued. "It may come as a surprise to many of you, but the U.S. Army is 'the' single largest install base for Red Hat Linux. I'm their largest customer." (2008)

This is pretty much what I had figured. I'm not exactly new to this, and I figured that in some way the military-industrial/corporate/intelligence complex was in control of Red Hat and Linux. [...] But I didn't expect it to be stated so plainly. Any fool should realize that "biggest customer" doesn't mean tallest or widest, it means the most money. In other words, most of Red Hat's money comes from the military and, as a result, they have significant pull in its development. In that respect, the connection between the military and spying agencies, etc. should be obvious.

Next, the FOSDEM: NSA Operation ORCHESTRA Annual Status Report is well worth watching in its entirety (including the Q&A at the end). To me, this turned out to be a road-map detailing how Red Hat is operating on Linux!"

 
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  • (Score: 4, Interesting) by cesarb on Thursday February 20 2014, @10:42AM

    by cesarb (1224) on Thursday February 20 2014, @10:42AM (#3322) Journal

    There is at least one place where RedHat (and indirectly Fedora) development is influenced by USA government policies: cryptography standards.

    One example is FIPS mode, which I have never seen anyone enable. When enabled, it restricts the allowed algorithms to those allowed by some USA government policies.

    Another example is their use of the NSS libraries as the main cryptography library, since they can be validated according to some USA government policy.

    Yet another example is they finally enabling at least some elliptic curve cryptography algorithms, which they had previously removed due to patent fears. Unsurprisingly, the ones they enabled are precisely the ones required by the latest version of some USA government policy.

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