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hypfer 2 hours ago

People have all right to be angry if basic responsible adult things like "quarantine the server spreading large amounts of malware" do not happen within the reasonable timespan that passed.

Not even a news. A hint. Nothing. Radio silence.

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There is a house. It is currently on fire (since over 24h). So far, people have talked about how, conceptually, house fires are bad.

You can still enter the house just fine.

People saying "hey what about locking the door to not trap more people in it" are being shunned for the crime of breaking someones workflow.

The owner of said house is nowhere to be seen.

Passerbys stating "oh my god that house is on fire! get water!" are either ignored or reminded that there is no problem and they should move along.

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Idk man. I don't think any of this is real.

And I don't even use arch, lol. And after this thing exposed the institutional rot, neither should you or really anyone.

Unless you like ending up locked inside a house fire. I guess they provide warmth in the cold harsh reality of the 2026 internet.

kpcyrd an hour ago | parent [-]

The server actually hosting the rootkit executable is npmjs.com, run by a for-profit company, and they still take about 24h to act on our reports, while reported AUR packages have been processed in about 1-2h by people that work unrelated dayjobs on top of this, to self-subsidize their open source work.

Sorry you're displeased with us not writing blogposts faster on top of all this. The situation is already exhausting enough without people like you.

hypfer an hour ago | parent [-]

Look, man, I understand all that, but pulling the plug is something that takes at most 90s. Let's say 300s to add the "Warning: There is an attack. We're working on it. Systems are down for now" box

After that, you have all the time in the world to prioritize dayjobs etc.

It's not about dropping everything and fixing the root cause. It's just about taking stuff offline so that the immediate danger is mitigated.

That is not too much to ask. It's not "people like me" having weird opinions there.

Shut it down. Then fix whenever there is time to do so.

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But hey. Finally a statement from someone with some amount of position in the org I guess?

I wouldn't want to be in your shoes for sure, but that's beside the point. Nothing here is unreasonable other than the ostrich-style incident response lack-of-process.

And I don't mean stupid corporate process. I mean "common sense adults are in the room" process. Throw waterbucket at burning server reflex.

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I mean I can see that your userbase absolutely sucks and could imagine that one would be scared of getting roasted for "interrupting their workflow", but this is not the way.

Their workflow is irrelevant.

As said, I'm all here for maintainer empathy, but only after the fire is put out first.

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Anyway, "institutional rot" is not an insult but a diagnosis. I'd love to be proven wrong on that, but I don't see it.

And trust me, I do know first hand how thankless this non-job is and what hell one goes through. I have skin in the game. I just don't have a horse in the arch race.

Tharre an hour ago | parent [-]

"Hey, let's take down all of npm, because there's a package that installs something malicious, and some people may install it without reviewing it first. The thousands of other people relying on this service can wait."

Do you not realize how crazy of an request that is?

hypfer an hour ago | parent [-]

You do realize that the people relying on the service also get served wormable malware, right?

The service is already disrupted. It is not that a disruption could be _avoided_. The discussion makes no sense.

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Hell, even if I would be completely wrong in that assessment (not sure how, but let's assume that's the case)

You can still put up a banner. "Hey, FYI: We're under attack".

If not right away, then at the very least the moment media reports on it. And if media reported wrong, the banner says "Don't worry people. Media got it wrong."

Tharre 25 minutes ago | parent [-]

> You do realize that the people relying on the service also get served malware, right? The service is already disrupted.

Huh? No they don't. I'm not sure what part of the attack your misunderstood, but most people are going to be completely unaffected by this. None of the infrastructure or anything like that got compromised. I updated my AUR packages 2 hours ago, and didn't get served any malware.

Again, there's probably some kind of malware on npmjs at any given time. You don't just shutdown the entire server because of that, that's madness.

hypfer 2 minutes ago | parent [-]

As said, I don't think discussing this makes sense, as our perceptions of reality seem to be fundamentally incompatible.

But regardless, let's try a different perspective: PR/Public perception

The moment multiple well-known media outlets start publishing a story stating that "stuff is happening", the situation changes.

At that point, regardless of how you personally feel about this, the narrative is "people are affected".

This forces your hand. Which is not(!) to say that it would mean that you would have to accept what the media says. The media could be full of shit talking nonsense. *But* at that point, you need to either correct them, or do the correct action as per their narrative.

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I don't think that PR/Public perception is the main relevant perspective here - in fact I'm just mentioning it, because all the much stronger much more technical arguments seem to be lost on you.

But there you go.

Your argument makes no sense, because "ackschually I'm unaffected" is just russian roulette survivorship bias, but even if it _would_ make sense, the system logic of the next outer layer cans that take.