I don't think I know the right answer here, but I will point out two things that make this a little more complicated.

1 - There are lots of altcoin developers and while I'm sure the majority would greatly appreciate the disclosure and would behave responsibly with the information, I don't know where you draw the line on who you tell and who you don't.

2- Unlike other software, I'm not sure good security for bitcoin is defined by constant upgrading.  Obviously upgrading has an important benefit, but one of the security considerations for Bitcoin is knowing that your definition of the money hasn't changed.  Much harder to know that if you change software.



On Sun, Sep 10, 2017 at 10:15 PM, Anthony Towns via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
On Sun, Sep 10, 2017 at 07:02:36PM -0400, Matt Corallo via bitcoin-dev wrote:
> I believe there continues to be concern over a number of altcoins which
> are running old, unpatched forks of Bitcoin Core, making it rather
> difficult to disclose issues without putting people at risk (see, eg,
> some of the dos issues which are preventing release of the alert key).
> I'd encourage the list to have a discussion about what reasonable
> approaches could be taken there.

That seems like it just says bitcoin core has two classes of users:
people who use it directly following mainnet or testnet, and people who
make derived works based on it to run altcoins.

Having a "responsible disclosure" timeline something like:

 * day -N: vulnerability reported privately
 * day -N+1: details shared amongst private trusted bitcoin core group
 * day 0: patch/workaround/mitigation determined, CVE reserved
 * day 1: basic information shared with small group of trusted users
      (eg, altcoin maintainers, exchanges, maybe wallet devs)
 * day ~7: patches can be included in git repo
      (without references to vulnerability)
 * day 90: release candidate with fix available
 * day 120: official release including fix
 * day 134: CVE published with details and acknowledgements

could make sense. 90 days / 3 months is hopefully a fair strict upper
bound for how long it should take to get a fix into a rc; but that's still
a lot longer than many responsible disclosure timeframes, like CERT's at
45 days, but also shorter than some bitcoin core minor update cycles...
Obviously, those timelines could be varied down if something is more
urgent (or just easy).

As it is, not publishing vulnerability info just seems like it gives
everyone a false sense of security, and encourages ignoring good security
practices, either not upgrading bitcoind nodes, or not ensuring altcoin
implementations keep up to date...

I suppose both "trusted bitcoin core group" and "small group of trusted
users" isn't 100% cypherpunk, but it sure seems better than not both not
disclosing vulnerability details, and not disclosing vulnerabilities
at all... (And maybe it could be made more cypherpunk by, say, having
the disclosures to trusted groups have the description/patches get
automatically fuzzed to perhaps allow identification of leakers?)

Cheers,
aj

> On 09/10/17 18:03, Simon Liu via bitcoin-dev wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Given today's presentation by Chris Jeffrey at the Breaking Bitcoin
> > conference, and the subsequent discussion around responsible disclosure
> > and industry practice, perhaps now would be a good time to discuss
> > "Bitcoin and CVEs" which has gone unanswered for 6 months.
> >
> > https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2017-March/013751.html
> >
> > To quote:
> >
> > "Are there are any vulnerabilities in Bitcoin which have been fixed but
> > not yet publicly disclosed?  Is the following list of Bitcoin CVEs
> > up-to-date?
> >
> > https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Common_Vulnerabilities_and_Exposures
> >
> > There have been no new CVEs posted for almost three years, except for
> > CVE-2015-3641, but there appears to be no information publicly available
> > for that issue:
> >
> > https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2015-3641
> >
> > It would be of great benefit to end users if the community of clients
> > and altcoins derived from Bitcoin Core could be patched for any known
> > vulnerabilities.
> >
> > Does anyone keep track of security related bugs and patches, where the
> > defect severity is similar to those found on the CVE list above?  If
> > yes, can that list be shared with other developers?"
> >
> > Best Regards,
> > Simon
> > _______________________________________________
> > bitcoin-dev mailing list
> > bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
> > https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev
> >
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