The thing is, the reporter is not a random independent security researcher. She's a core team member of Lix, the fork, and is no stranger to the Nix community. This incident directly relates to the wider conflict between the two projects. That's why people are upset.
Nobody ever said it isn't okay to report security issues. This is about dumping 0 days on social media when you know fully well that the other side is cooperating and working on a fix. The who in this case matters because the reporter knew how the Nix community works, knew it was hostile thing to do, and did it anyways.
What I meant is crystal clear if you read what I was replying to. Please don't take it out of context to spin a story. You did it in your original comment, and you did it again right here.
No, I'm really not trying to take things out of context, but what you wrote really makes it seem like the person who reports it matters.
Ignoring that, I agree that it's a dick move, but it's like our famous "well, technically" memes - the delivery might matter, but in the case of security issues, it really doesn't matter as much as the actual content.
"You have an issue, and I'm going to be a dick and release it in a week."
Yes, that would be a dick move, but someone acting like a dick doesn't mean that the Nix team shouldn't address the issue within that week, even if it does feel like extortion.
Also, those matrix links say nothing. I'm not sure what we're supposed to do with them, but I'm not downloading software to see whatever it is you want to share.