FOSS Weekly #26.14: Open Source Office Drama, Ubuntu MATE Troubles, Conky With Ease, Session Management in Wayland and More Linux Stuff
Controversies all around.
Latest Linux and open source news from around the web
Controversies all around.
More than a novelty from north of the 49th, this Debian‑based distro uses Canadian and EU privacy principles to offer a telemetry‑free, ready‑to‑work Cinnamon desktop. The post Proudly Canadian Maple Linux 1.4: Who Knew Tux Could Be So Polite? appeared first on FOSS Force.
TDF has used a bylaw Collabora publicly opposed to strip over 30 of its most active developers of their membership.
It was rejected due to insufficient consideration for systemd-less environments like containers.
Linux continues its rise on Steam, reaching a record 5% share in Valve’s March 2026 Hardware and Software Survey.
The Rust-based version of sudo shows password feedback by default in Ubuntu 26.04 LTS, upending nearly 40 years of learned (and confusing) behaviour. Broadly, that decision has been well received, but those who want a quick option to temporarily mask their sudo input (no asterisks), just got one. You can now toggle sudo password feedback visibility by pressing the tab key. You can press it at any point during password entry (before you start or mid-way through, it doesn’t matter), and rather than asterisk, it shows (no-echo) instead. Here’s a video of it in action: The lack visible feedback during […]
Netrunner 26 “Twilight” is out now, based on Debian 13 Trixie, with KDE Plasma 6.3.6, Linux kernel 6.16, and updated desktop apps.
The kernel provides a number of ways for processes to communicate with each other, but they never quite seem to fit the bill for many users. There are currently a few proposals for interprocess communication (IPC) enhancements circulating on the mailing lists. The most straightforward one adds a new system call for POSIX message queues that enables the addition of new features. For those wanting an entirely new way to do interprocess communication, there is a proposal to add a new subsystem for that purpose to io_uring. Finally, the bus1 proposal has made a return after ten years.
When I talk about Matrix, I’m not introducing “yet another messaging app.” I’m talking about a communication protocol that solves a series of structural problems introduced in centralized platforms. The discussion is not abstract anymore. Between political pressure, regulatory proposals ... Read more The post Morrolinux: Matrix vs. Chat Control – Why Decentralization Matters appeared first on Linux Professional Institute (LPI).
Brian "bex" Exelbierd has published a blog post exploring follow-up questions raised by the recent debate about the use of the LLM-based review tool Sashiko in the memory-management subsystem. His main finding is that Sashiko reviews are bi-modal with regards to whether they contain reports about code not directly changed by the patch set — most do not, but the ones that do often have several such comments. Hypothesis 1: Reviewers are getting told about bugs they didn't create. Sashiko's review protocol explicitly instructs the LLM to read surrounding code, not just the diff. That's good review practice — but it means the tool might flag pre-existing bugs in code the patch author merely touched, putting those problems in their inbox. Hypothesis 2: The same pre-existing bugs surface repeatedly. If a known issue in a subsystem doesn't get fixed between review runs, every patch touching nearby code could trigger the same finding. That would create a steady drip of duplicate noise across t
OpenSSH 10.3 has been released. Among the many changes in this release are a security fix to address late validation of metacharacters in user names, removal of bug compatibility for SSH implementations that do not support rekeying, and a fix to ensure that scp clears setuid/setgid bits from downloaded files when operating as root in legacy (-O) mode. See the release announcement for a full list of new features, bug fixes, and potentially incompatible changes.
Security updates have been issued by AlmaLinux (python3.11, python3.12, squid, and thunderbird), Debian (gst-plugins-bad1.0 and gst-plugins-ugly1.0), Fedora (bpfman, crun, gnome-remote-desktop, polkit, python3.14, rust-rustls-webpki, rust-sccache, rust-scx_layered, rust-scx_rustland, rust-scx_rusty, and scap-security-guide), Oracle (freerdp, gstreamer1-plugins-bad-free, gstreamer1-plugins-base, gstreamer1-plugins-good, and gstreamer1-plugins-ugly-free, kernel, libxslt, python3.11, python3.12, squid, and thunderbird), SUSE (389-ds, busybox, chromium, cosign, curl, docker-compose, exiv2, expat, firefox, freerdp, freerdp2, gstreamer-plugins-ugly, harfbuzz, heroic-games-launcher, ImageMagick, kea, keylime, libjxl, librsvg, libsodium, libsoup, net-snmp, net-tools, netty, nghttp2, poppler, postgresql13, postgresql16, postgresql17, postgresql18, protobuf, python-black, python-orjson, python-pyasn1, python-pyOpenSSL, python-tornado, python-tornado6, python311-nltk, thunderbird, tomcat10, tomca
Greg Kroah-Hartman has released the 6.19.11, 6.18.21, 6.12.80, and 6.6.131 stable kernels, followed by a quick release of 6.6.132 with two patches reverted to address a problem building the rust core in 6.6.131. Each kernel contains important fixes; users are advised to upgrade.
OpenSSH 10.3 introduces security fixes, new SSH features, and improvements to agent forwarding, multiplexing, and key handling.
Just over one year ago Intel Linux engineers began working on cache-aware load balancing for Linux or more commonly referred to as Cache Aware Scheduling. The functionality for helping modern Intel Xeon and AMD EPYC processors especially hasn't yet been upstreamed to the Linux kernel but yesterday the fourth version of these patches were posted for review...