56

Since the beginning of the Ukraine-Russian war, a new kind of software was created, which is called "protestware".

In the best case, the devs only add some (personal) statements about the war or uncensored information to the repositories or when starting the application. Since Github and other platforms are not banned in Russia, this could help to reach users and provide them with news.

The open source initiative wrote in a blog post, that's ok to add a personal statement or add some commit messages with information about the war to reach users with uncensored information.

But there are also projects which add malicious behavior. One example is the "node-ipc package", which deletes files depending on the geolocation. The affected versions also have their own CVE (CVE-2022-23812) which was rated with a CVSS of 9.8.

From a security perspective, it's best practice to install the latest version, which should fix security issues but not introduce new ones as a "feature".

But the node-ipc module showed that each maintainer/developer can add bad behavior to the software as a political statement.

Question:

  • New software versions can be used as a political statement. As a user, should I be concerned about political messages in software?
  • What should I do to mitigate malicious behavior?
    • I can't review the code of all used libraries and applications.
    • A lot of users do not have the knowledge to understand the code.
5

3 Answers 3

85

Political statements in software can be a concern for a few reasons:

  • The may result in the software being banned in your country, so you should plan for that eventuality.
  • They may result in the software being targeted (for example, the Notepad++ GitHub has been repeatedly spammed by Chinese accounts over its various version names). And this may turn into more dangerous attacks which could compromise the software.
  • It may indicate that the author is more likely to make actual changes to the software down the line.
  • It suggests that the software is probably developed by an individual, which can make it more fragile and susceptible various issues.

But if the software actively does something malicious, then it's not "protestware". It's just malware. So you should treat it the same as if the software decided to bundle a password stealer/cryptominer/ransomware/etc - using your existing supply chain and dependency management processes.

The author(s) should also be blacklisted in your internal processes so that you don't use anything they have written (or anything that depends on them) again.

It's also worth nothing that this isn't really anything to do with "open source". Adding political messages to software is just as easy with closed source projects, and adding malicious code is much easier, because it's harder to detect. Because of this, a lot of organisations are advising against using software from unfriendly countries (such as the FCC recently stating that Kaspersky is considered an "unacceptable risk to national security").

4
  • 33
    Big +1. I have seriously considered writing a browser extension that flags all projects with commit access for GitHub users who put malware - no matter how targeted or sincerely well-intentioned or quickly removed - into their code or carry out similar supply-chain attacks, with a warning to the users about it. Possibly also extend that to the GitHub users who downvoted the malware report and/or upvoted the author's defense / deflection / outright lies about what he'd done (about 3% of total reactions). Open source often has no corporate reputations, but maybe it should have personal ones.
    – CBHacking
    Mar 27, 2022 at 13:32
  • 15
    The main reason I haven't is that maintaining the list of who is and isn't on it seems like a nightmare if it ever got big, and a mostly-useless effort if it didn't, and there are already systems to monitor supply chains such as Snyk. The reason I'm tempted anyway is that a lot of individual devs aren't using such systems, and I really wish there was a good way to publicly document "missing stairs" in the open source community.
    – CBHacking
    Mar 27, 2022 at 13:36
  • 2
    With that said, a caveat regarding the proprietary vs. open source situation: proprietary software is usually less composed of many small pieces developed individually. While a company could certainly decide to ship malware, it would take the agreement of more people (management, the actual developers, the peer reviewers, and probably anybody else who interfaces with or dogfoods that software internally... which might be a huge list) to do so and ship it without the word getting out. Lots of open source projects are one-person affairs where there are no checks on what goes into them.
    – CBHacking
    Mar 29, 2022 at 0:44
  • @CBHacking that's true to some extent - but then almost all propriety software bundles a whole load of third party dependencies, and most companies aren't really doing much management of those.
    – Gh0stFish
    Mar 29, 2022 at 8:10
6

What should I do to mitigate malicious behavior?

I can't review the code of all used libraries and applications.

Agreed. Very, very few shops can afford to review all dependencies in depth.

But that is, IMHO, no excuse to (automatically) pull untested and unverified dependencies:

  • When you get a new dependency, you at least smoke test it.
  • When you upgrade your package-lock.json, you check what packages changed: In most situations, you can't verify them all in detail, but you can run an internal test of your software for any obvious malicious behavior.
4

Obviously yes

... but not because it is protestware.

Here's the bottom line: open-source software is something your org doesn't control. The people who wrote it have no legal obligations to your org for the simple and obvious reason that neither they nor your org have undertaken to form a relationship by which you could hold each other accountable. That is true whether or not the software in question is "protestware."

The truth is that anybody who uses software they didn't write is putting their fate in someone else's hands. The only thing that sets protestware apart is that we think we know the reason the software doesn't do what it says it does -- that reason being that the actual authors have deliberately broken their software as an act of political protest. But significant breakage can happen even when everyone is trying to do a good job: I remember back in 2016 there was an innocent problem with some widely-used library that ended up breaking everyone's webpack builds for something like 24 hours.

A person doesn't need a war to justify that kind of action. They don't even need a reasonable belief: there are plenty of very smart programmers out there who are also tin-foil-hat crazy. And the other side of that coin is that there are some organizations that a sane person would be justified in subverting. None of this changes the fact that every organization is 100% responsible for taking appropriate safeguards to prevent outsiders from interfering, deliberately or otherwise, with the pursuit of that org's objectives.

The onus is, and always has been, on consumers of third-party software to take precautions against the possibility that the software they consume may change in a way they don't like. That's true whether or not their goals diverge from the goals of the random outsiders whose software they consume. The "advent" of protestware does not change that fact whatsoever.

12
  • 1
    There's nothing about this which is specific to open source software.
    – Gh0stFish
    Mar 29, 2022 at 15:34
  • @Gh0stFish Closed-source software tends to come with transfers of money and legal accountability.
    – user253751
    Mar 29, 2022 at 18:53
  • 2
    @user253751 open source does not mean free, and free does not mean open source - they're two completely different things. And all software comes with license agreements - whether or not you pay for it makes no difference.
    – Gh0stFish
    Mar 29, 2022 at 19:00
  • 1
    @EgorHans You might look at section 9d in the Windows 10 EULA as an example. You may not recover damages unless required by law and then only up the the amount you paid for the product. Similar for other products I looked at.
    – doneal24
    Mar 30, 2022 at 12:16
  • 1
    @EgorHans Both the MS EULA and the GPL explicitly excludes any warranties so I'm not sure of the difference you're pointing out here. What customer is big enough to bully Microsoft or Oracle? If they're that big, the possible damages are huge and no company would want to take them on.
    – doneal24
    Mar 30, 2022 at 12:36

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .