Insecure updates are the rule, not the exception
Mixed Signals

Kurt looks at the practice of code signing and examines why so few upstream open source projects actually do it.
First, the good news: Most major Linux vendors sign their software and source code packages, thereby allowing end users and administrators to verify that the code has indeed originated from the vendor and hasn't been modified or tampered with after being signed.
Most tools like Yum and RPM check package signatures by default and will refuse to install or upgrade packages unless they are properly signed (which you can override manually). So, why am I worried about upstream code signing of updates? Because very few open source projects actually sign their code properly, if at all. This means that if an attacker breaks into a distribution site, they can modify existing source code packages or upload new ones with malicious code. Users cannot easily detect a problem unless they have a copy of the code for comparison or they compare the changes in the new version against an old version. And yes, people do break into major sites (e.g., the Linode hack earlier this year) [1].
Why People Don't Sign Code
Why don't upstream open source projects sign their code properly? Doing so would allow vendors like Debian and Red Hat and end users to verify easily that the code was signed by the project in question. There are several reasons: the first is that signing code correctly, even minimally, is a chore and requires some setup. But, more importantly, it requires ongoing discipline; you must protect the signing keys forever, you must sign and verify the signed code, and you must handle key management. Additionally, code signing only proves that a file containing certain content was signed; it does nothing to attest to the quality of the code (everyone has security flaws in their software). For all you know, the upstream project has taken code contributions containing a back door.
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