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Culture War Roundup for the week of October 24, 2022

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So for those not in the know, this "OVE" is basically trying to mimic what is called a CVE report, and fake it enough such that maintainers get scared and take action to deplatform the package, despite it not even being a real CVE report. I'd go as far to say that calling it merely a "fake CVE" is being too charitable. That's how much this abuses a process that is (nominally) politically neutral and objective.

It gets even better. Just parsing the naming convention, you get "OVE", October 17th 2022, report 0001. CVE stands for Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures. I'd presume the O is related to Open as in Open Source but replacing the word Common with it doesn't make much semantic sense to me. In CVE terms that'd be the first report for the entire year but even then, the formatting is wrong since CVEs don't embed full dates just the year. Let's just take a look at the website that maintains the list of OVEs. It is literally some randos blog with nothing else related to vulnerabilities political or otherwise. Quite the social engineering effort.

Apparently OVEs aren't just something that the blogger cooked up out of thin air; some security group called "Openwall" maintains a service that generates these unique OVE IDs (you can generate your own here and verify that the site won't reuse IDs, even after a refresh). Of course, that doesn't change things too much; these OVEs are poorly-known enough that some of the blogger's friends only found out via this incident, and one wonders if the blogger would have used an OVE if the ID format and name didn't bear such a resemblance to the better-known, scary CVEs. But it's not quite as bad as the blogger making stuff up from whole cloth.

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