To me its okay to “demand” from a for profit company (eg google) to fix an issue fast. Because they have ressources. But to “demand” that an oss project fix something with a certain (possibly tight) timeframe.. well I’m sure you better than me, that that’s not who volunteering works
That is not an accurate description? Project Zero was using a 90 day disclosure policy from the start, so for over a decade.
What changed[0] in 2025 is that they disclose earlier than 90 days that there is an issue, but not what the issue is. And actually, from [1] it does not look like that trial policy was applied to ffmpeg.
> To me its okay to “demand” from a for profit company (eg google) to fix an issue fast. Because they have ressources. But to “demand” that an oss project fix something with a certain (possibly tight) timeframe.. well I’m sure you better than me, that that’s not who volunteering works
You clearly know that no actual demands or even requests for a fix were made, hence the scare quotes. But given you know it, why call it a "demand"?
[0] https://googleprojectzero.blogspot.com/2025/07/reporting-tra..., discussed at https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44724287
[1] https://googleprojectzero.blogspot.com/p/reporting-transpare...
It's similar to someone cooking a meal for you, and you go on and complain about every little thing that could have been better instead of at least saying "thank you"!
Here, Google is doing the responsible work of reporting vulnerabilities. But any company productizing ffmpeg usage (Google included) should sponsor a security team to resolve issues in high profile projects like these too.
Sure, the problem is that Google is a behemoth and their internal org structure does not cater to this scenario, but this is what the complaint is about: make your internal teams do the right thing by both reporting, but also helping fix the issue with hands-on work. Who'd argue against halving their vulnerability finding budget and using the other half to fund a security team that fixes highest priority vulnerabilities instead?
My understanding is that the bug in question was fixed about 100 times faster than Project Zero's standard disclosure timeline. I don't know what vulnerability report your scenario is referring to, but it certainly is not this one.
> and name-calling the maintainers
Except Google did not "name-call the maintainers" or anything even remotely resembling that. You just made it up, just like GP made up the the "demands". It's pretty telling that all these supposed misdeeds are just total fabrications.
So how long should all bug reporters wait before filing public bugs against open source projects? What about closed source projects? Anyone who works in software knows to ship software is to always have way more things to do than time to do it in. By this logic, we should never make bug reports public until the software maintainers (whether OSS, Apple or Microsoft) has a fix ready. Instead of "with enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow" the new policy going forward I guess will be "with enough blindfolds, all bugs are low priority".
It's a call not to stop reporting, but to equally invest in fixing these.
In the end, Google does submit patches and code to ffmpeg, they also buy consulting from the ffmpeg maintainers. And here they did some security testing and filed a detailed and useful bug report. But because they didn't file a patch with the bug report, we're dragging them through the mud. And for what? When another corporation looks at what Google does do, and what the response this bug report has gotten them, which do you think is the most likely lesson learned?
1) "We should invest equally in reporting and patching bugs in our open source dependencies"
2) "We should shut the hell up and shouldn't tell anyone else about bugs and vulnerabilities we discover, because even if you regularly contribute patches and money to the project, that won't be good enough. Our name and reputation will get dragged for having the audacity to file a detailed bug report without also filing a patch."
All I am saying is that you should be as mindful to open source maintainers as you are to the people at companies.
It’s almost almost like bitching about the “free labor” open source projects are getting from their users, especially when that labor is of good quality and comes from a user that is actively contributing both code and money to the project is a losing strategy for open source fans and maintainers.
> All I am saying is that you should be as mindful to open source maintainers as you are to the people at companies.
And all I’m saying is there is nothing that’s “un-mindful” about reporting real bugs to an open source project, whether that report is public or not. And especially when that report is well crafted and actionable. If this report were for something that wasn’t a bug, is this report was a low quality “foo is broke, plz to fix” report with no actionable information, or if the report actually came with demands for responses and commitment timelines, then it would be a different matter. But ffmpeg runs a public bug tracker. To say then that making public bug reports is somehow disrespectful of the maintainers is ridiculous.