

Good question. I would imagine the internal ones would be cheaper, but its the contrary. Crazy


Good question. I would imagine the internal ones would be cheaper, but its the contrary. Crazy


Ah, interesting. So in principle they wouldn’t leave a VLC or Media player with a big bug out there for long. The VLC of Mint is actually older 3.0.20-3build6 and it also looks like backported 3 times. I thought they were the same as Ubuntu but apparently not.


I understood they backport security updates, but is that also for apps in the software manager? For example: Currently I am using Mint. The VLC version there is 3.0.20 which is behind 2 years (current is 3.0.23). According to the releases of VLC, it indicated security fixes. Do these get fixes within the old number or are they neglected? What do you think? I concord by the wya on what you say related to rolling distro vs stable.


And I never worried one time in my life about exploits in media files, it’s just extremely unlikely that between the time a 0day is discovered, and your system is updated (you do update frequently, right?), that torrent is going to exploit some player or media library.
Last time I heard of something like that, it was like 10 years ago, a gstreamer 0day that got quickly patched.
Executable files aren’t going to execute themselves. If you don’t chmod +x them they shouldn’t execute at all even if you click them. I guess it can depend on your system.
I am much more concerned about internet facing applications like a web browser or torrent client.
True, the combination of Media Player exploit + Linux + not patched, it is very unlikely. However, what if he is using a Debian based distro? Those may have a couple of year old version of VLC installed in the package manager for example…
That makes sense. And do you know between Mybook and Elements what is the primary difference? Besides the looks of the outer casing.