• nandeEbisu@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    An issue I’ve seen brought up in the open source community is that they have audits that look at the number of untriaged issues and time to resolve serious issues that their funding depends on.

    I’m in software, but not open source, so it seems like they don’t have someone aligned with their team who they can sit down and say “either we need more resources, cut scope for new features, or accept quality / security issues coming up” to, its kind of this weird game of politics they end up needing to play to get any kind of funding for full time maintainers.

    That’s the main reason they can’t just ignore issues that come up in their backlog, especially security ones.

    • lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com
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      4 hours ago

      their funding depends on

      That’s an unnecessary issue regarding someone’s income, which some projects don’t even have.

      its kind of this weird game of politics they end up needing to play

      They don’t need to. It’s a supply & demand issue: if a maintainer finds the terms unacceptable and goes “fuck you, pay us right, lower your expectations, or piss off” then what is the funder going to do? Let the software rot? They either want the software or they don’t, and it’s not going to be cheaper to develop that software in a non-open setting. They’ll have to reconcile terms or find another maintainer who’ll work for less in a market where their skills are highly valued.

      Objective facts of reality are unrelated to the reasonability of business arrangements people work out to address those facts. This is a negotiation skills issue to address with the business partner, not with immutable, objective reality.

      It’s a free world: anyone is free to express truths about security defects at any time, and no one owes anyone anything on the timing of those disclosures.