this post was submitted on 08 Apr 2024
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When the xz backdoor was discovered, I quickly uninstalled my Arch based setup with an infected version of the software and switched to a distro that shipped an older version (5.5 or 5.4 or something). I found an article which said that in 5.6.1-3 the backdoor was "fixed" by just not letting the malware part communicating with the vulnerable ssh related stuff and the actual malware is still there? (I didn't understand 80% of the technical terms and abbreviations in it ok?) Like it still sounds kinda dangerous to me, especially since many experts say that we don't know the other ways this malware can use (except for the ssh supply chain) yet. Is it true? Should I stick with the new distro for now or can I absolutely safely switch back and finally say that I use Arch btw again?

P. S. I do know that nothing is completely safe. Here I'm asking just about xz and libxzlk or whatever the name of that library is

EDIT: 69 upvotes. Nice

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[–] caseyweederman@lemmy.ca 5 points 7 months ago (1 children)

Not quite. It wasn't confirmed to be affected, but they can't prove that the build environment itself wasn't compromised, thus the rebuild.

As a result of CVE-2024-3094 332, Canonical made the decision to remove and rebuild all binary packages that had been built for Noble Numbat after the CVE-2024-3094 332 code was committed to xz-utils (February 26th), on newly provisioned build environments. This provides us with confidence that no binary in our builds could have been affected by this emerging threat.

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/noble-numbat-beta-delayed-xz-liblzma-security-update/43827

And in the follow-up:

Was the vulnerable library ever in the Ubuntu 24.04 LTS (Noble Numbat) daily builds?

No.  

https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/xz-liblzma-security-update-post-2/43801

[–] pastermil@sh.itjust.works 4 points 7 months ago

Thanks for the correction!