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Simon has just provided a superb account of the Java security problem in an InfoWorld blog post 
today:
<http://www.infoworld.com/t/java-programming/why-fixing-the-java-flaw-will-take-so-long-210946>.

I find this more-technical analysis to be plausible as well, and Simon's report provides context 
that makes it a bit more understandable:
<http://lists.grok.org.uk/pipermail/full-disclosure/2013-January/089375.html>.

My initial concern as this game of dominoes unfolded over the past few months was that Oracle had 
somehow managed to lose its grip on the reliable development of Java and especially its security 
and safety.  It is somewhat reassuring that the problems are with respect to new capabilities 
introduced in Java 7, offset by evidence that a concerted threat analysis was not done and that, 
even when a flaw was detected, the broader consequences did not appear to be recognized (or at 
least acknowledged).  

That the manner in which security flaws are handled in private can lead to rampant speculation 
about the competence/attitude of the software producer is not helping.  There is a tendency to now 
treat Java as insecure until proven otherwise, where proving otherwise is a near-impossible bar to 
hurdle.  (Look at the difficulty that Microsoft has in establishing that its products are *not* so 
insecure as it remains in the popular wisdom.)

For users of openoffice-lineage software, I am not sure what the concern should be.  Disabling java 
browser plugins seems prudent.  It may be inevitable that web sites will cease depending on users 
employing such plugins with the famed Java Applet disappearing into history.

That does not have so much to do with desktop software, apart from the fact that links to malicious 
web sites can be activated when those links are in documents or have been crafted into versions 
created by downstream creators of variant implementations, the ones that are carriers for malware 
of various kinds.  It seems wise, these days, to only obtain "official" releases, preferably ones 
that are digitally signed, such as those provided by The Document Foundation.

With regard to the use of Java in connection with extensions, including for database access, I 
think the question is more about the security and reliability of extensions, whether or not there 
is dependency on Java.  This is about more than Java since extensions run under the privileges of 
the extension user and no sandbox narrows those privileges.  

I have no doubt that more work is required to provide some way to verify the authenticity of 
extensions and also assess the dependability of their providers.  The more that openoffice-lineage 
software becomes the product of choice in attack-rewarding activities, the greater will be the 
urgency to have secure operation of the software and components employed with it. 

 - Dennis

-----Original Message-----
From: Simon Phipps [mailto:simon@webmink.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2013 19:29
To: Dennis Hamilton
Cc: lj; Libreoffice Discussion List
Subject: Re: [tdf-discuss] LibreOffice and Java Security: OpenJDK Vulnerability

I'm investigating, but the issue is a sandbox security manager bypass using
unauthorised reflection and that's exploited using Rhino Javascript. So the
context has to be a browser for there to be an issue even if OpenJDK is
affected. See https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=CVE-2013-0422 for
lots of data...

S.


On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 6:58 PM, Dennis E. Hamilton <dennis.hamilton@acm.org
wrote:

Again, thanks to Simon Phipps for retweeting the information.

It appears that one should *not* assume that OpenJDK does not share
vulnerabilities with the Oracle Java SE and JDK:

The log of changes to OpenJDK for the recent vulnerability (just as
indication of the Oracle updating of OpenJDK):
<http://mail.openjdk.java.net/pipermail/jdk7u-dev/2013-January/005354.html


The CVE:
<
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/topics/security/alert-cve-2013-0422-1896849.html


There is still reporting that this update is not a complete fix.  I have
not found a reliable technical source that makes clear what the remaining
concern is, or if it is simply a lag in reports that have not recognized
the latest patches.

 - Dennis

-----Original Message-----
From: Dennis E. Hamilton [mailto:dennis.hamilton@acm.org]
Sent: Sunday, January 13, 2013 13:27
To: 'lj'; 'Libreoffice Discussion List'
Subject: RE: [tdf-discuss] LibreOffice and Java Security:

This just out:

<https://blogs.oracle.com/security/entry/security_alert_for_cve_2013>

(Thanks to Simon Phipps for the link.)

Note that the vulnerabilities "only affect Oracle Java 7 versions."

 - Dennis

-----Original Message-----
From: lj [mailto:ljeloudev@gmail.com]
Sent: Saturday, January 12, 2013 19:23
To: Libreoffice Discussion List
Subject: [tdf-discuss] LibreOffice and Java Security:

Hi all,
I am not sure if this is the correct list for this message.
I recently read this article about a Java 1.7 Security Problem.
Does this problem concern LibreOffice and Java???
This macrumors article post and reads that this problem effects java
versions 4-7. At the moment oracle are at java 7.


http://www.macrumors.com/2013/01/11/apple-blocks-java-7-on-os-x-to-address-widespread-security-threat/


The Forbes article reveals that Mozilla, and Apple are advising users to
disable Java on there machines because of this security problem.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/eliseackerman/2013/01/11/us-department-of-homeland-security-calls-on-computer-users-to-disable-java/



http://thenextweb.com/apple/2013/01/11/apple-takes-no-prisoners-immediately-blocks-java-7-on-os-x-10-6-and-up-to-protect-mac-users/


Can I use LibreOffice without Java enabled on my computer?? As I receive
annoying pop up windows when I first use libreoffice to install Java on
Apple OS X Mountain Lion.

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