A recent security study’s findings are probably likely to shock a little bit the increasing number of open source projects’ fans. Nowadays, writing open source software seems to have become kind of a trend, but despite its obvious benefits, this set of principles and practices seems to be prone to security glitches and this is quite a risky side effect.
The
According to Coverity, the program’s findings showed that all of the 180 open sources software projects had significant numbers of security flaws. The company also said that since 2006 the study had helped fix no less than 7,826 open source flaws in 250 projects, out of 50 million lines of code scanned.
On Wednesday Coverity advanced the first batch of 11 open source projects to the second step of the bug-cleansing process, called Rung 2. These projects are Amanda, NTP, OpenPAM, OpenVPN, Overdose, Perl, PHP, Postfix, Python, Samba, and TCL. Rung 2 represents the highest security level reached until now under the Department of Homeland Security’s project.