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Tuesday, June 23rd, 2015

    Time Event
    5:10p
    Tuesday's security advisories

    Arch Linux has updated curl (information disclosure).

    Debian-LTS has updated postgresql-8.4 (denial of service).

    Fedora has updated xorg-x11-server (F22: permission bypass).

    Gentoo has updated chromium (multiple vulnerabilities) and gnutls (denial of service).

    Red Hat has updated kernel (RHEL7: multiple vulnerabilities), kernel-rt (RHEL7; RHEMRG2.5: multiple vulnerabilities), libreswan (RHEL7: denial of service), mailman (RHEL7: path traversal attack), and php (RHEL7: multiple vulnerabilities).

    SUSE has updated e2fsprogs (SLE11SP4: code execution).

    Ubuntu has updated kernel (14.10; 14.04; 12.04: regression in previous update), linux-ti-omap4 (12.04: regression in previous update), linux-lts-trusty (12.04: regression in previous update), linux-lts-utopic (14.04: regression in previous update), and patch (14.10, 14.04, 12.04: multiple vulnerabilities).

    6:08p
    Stable kernel updates
    Greg Kroah-Hartman has released stable kernels 4.0.6, 3.14.45, and 3.10.81. All of them contain important
    fixes throughout the tree.
    10:19p
    Red Hat Announces Winners of Women in Open Source Awards
    Red Hat has announced the winners of its Women in Open Source Awards. The Academic Award goes to Kesha Shah, a student at Dhirubhai Ambani Institute of Information and Communication Technology, and the Community Award goes to Sarah Sharp, embedded software architect at Intel. Opensource.com has interviews with both women.

    Kesha Shah: "Last year, I was a mentor in Season of KDE and GCI again, with BRLCAD and KDE. Now, I am currently working on testing automation of Ushahidi with Systers, an Anita Borg community, as a part of GSoC. During my journey, I had seen several of my peers enter the domain, succeed, and fail in equal measure. So, I took up the challenge of mentoring newbies. One of my biggest achievements is that I have personally guided about 20-22 newbies into the world of open source through mentoring programs like GCI, SoK, Learn IT girls, and through conducting hands-on workshops and enlightening talks on open source. Those efforts converted them to regular contributors."

    Sarah Sharp: "My second proudest moment is the very first round when the Linux kernel participated in the Outreach Program for Women (now called Outreachy). A lot of kernel maintainers complained about how newcomers would send them mangled patches, and grump about how the newcomers should really just RTFM and look at our patch submission guidelines. Of course, it turned out the manual was lacking or out of date, and there were a lot of steps to set up tools for Linux kernel development, so I spent a week and created a step-by-step tutorial. It was really gratifying to see those first applicants go through my tutorial and send well-formed patches. I've loved watching those interns move onto bigger projects, and even get hired to work on the Linux kernel, and I'm really proud I was able to help people get involved in Linux kernel development."

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