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Given that Google is both the company generating the bug reports and one of the companies using the buggy library, while most of the ffmpeg maintainers presumably aren't using their libraries to run companies with a $3.52 trillion dollar market cap, would you argue that going public with vulnerabilities that affect your own product before you've fixed them is also a naive approach?


Sorry, but this states a lot of assumption as fact to ask a question which only makes sense if it's all true. I feel Google should assist the project more financially given how much they use it, but I don't think Google shipping products using every codec they find bugs for with their open source fuzzer project is a reasonable guess. I certainly doubt YouTube/Chrome let's you upload/compiles ffmpeg with this LucasArts format, as an example. For security issues relevant to their usage via Chrome CVEs etc, they seem to contribute on fixes as needed. E.g. here is one via fuzzing or a codec they use and work on internally https://github.com/FFmpeg/FFmpeg/commit/b1febda061955c6f4bfb...

In regards whether it's a bad idea to publicly document security concerns found regardless whether you plan on fixing them, it often depends if you ask the product manager what they want for their product or what the security concerned folks in general want for every product :).




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