Security: Updates, Firewalls and ARIN

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Security updates for Monday
Security updates have been issued by Arch Linux (chromium, firefox, php, and thunderbird), Debian (file, golang-1.11, libarchive, libxslt, mosquitto, php5, and proftpd-dfsg), Fedora (apache-commons-compress, chromium, java-1.8.0-openjdk, java-11-openjdk, jss, kernel, kernel-headers, kernel-tools, libpcap, mod_auth_openidc, tcpdump, and xpdf), openSUSE (kernel, openconnect, procps, python, sysstat, and zziplib), and SUSE (binutils, docker-runc, ImageMagick, nfs-utils, and xen).
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Most system administrators prefer firewall GUIs over CLIs
Almost 60% of sysadmins said they "preferred" GUIs over CLIs, and 70% said they "used" GUIs on a daily basis.
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You're ARIN a laugh: Critical internet org accused of undercutting security over legal fears
A key internet infrastructure organization is undercutting efforts to make the internet more secure by insisting ISPs accept a legal agreement before using a security framework, critics charge.
The org in question – US-based regional internet registry ARIN – argues that under American law, it has to have people consciously accept its terms and conditions for them to be legally binding. ARIN is worried that the kerfuffle could end up at the end of countless lawsuits if ISPs rely too heavily on this security framework and end up cutting off subscribers if its service goes down or awry.
At the heart of the issue is a relatively new system, known as Resource Public Key Infrastructure (RPKI), which was developed by the global regional internet registries (RIRs) that are responsible for overseeing and allocating IP addresses.
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The end result of ARIN’s stance is that adoption of RPKI in North America is lower than other regions, and that has created a knock-on impact where ISPs are not signing up to the framework because others haven’t. Of the roughly 50,000 ISPs worldwide, only around 2,000 are currently signed up to the framework.
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