tapir wrote:...
I am a bit disappointed by L19-admin stance on this. It is a help neither to L19 (who is going to sue the biggest english language go forum when he starts a new go server basically funded by volunteers all over the world? the same for any other go related software.) nor to Kaya (how will they professionalize when nobody dares to give them feedback on crucial issues?)...
The concern is not about kaya disclosure. Nobody is going to sue anybody over it. Nobody has suffered any significant harm, nor does anybody have exposure such that they could suffer harm from it.
It is the possible NEXT disclosure that concerns me. If, in the future, somebody divulges a security flaw about some other web site on L19, and there is significant harm to someone as a result, then how we handled this one could be relevant.
If our actions on the kaya issue reflect a disregard for preventing the spreading of security flaws, it can be argued that we disregarded the later issue too.
tapir wrote:... The harming details in question were all present on the Kaya website...
Surprisingly, in US civil law, this is not really relevant. Either we are or are not spreading info about security flaws. That someone else makes such information available too does not cover us. ( Unless they are just blanketing the world with the info such that our actions had no effect whatsoever. )