Torvalds was reacting to the act by a group at the University of Minnesota who sent known buggy patches to senior developer Greg Kroah-Hartman in order to write a paper.
Kroah-Hartman, normally a man who is the epitome of politeness, lost his cool when these patches were sent as it needlessly created additional work for him. He maintains the stable line of kernels.
How did this proposal pass the ethics approval process?
— Ramanan N (@njr07121977) April 22, 2021
"I don't really know what to say, I think the email thread is likely the most relevant information," Torvalds told iTWire in response to a query.
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Kroah-Hartman told the university's Aditya Pakki that the buggy patches had been sent to see how the kernel community would react, so that some others at the same institution could write a research paper.
The university's Qiushi Wu and Kangjie Lu published the paper in question, which is titled "On the feasibility of stealthily introducing vulnerabilities in open-source software via hypocrite commits".
It claimed to explore the possibility of stealthily introducing vulnerabilities in open-source software, in this case the Linux kernel.
Despite these provocations, Kroah-Hartman used polite language in responding to Pakki and the university.
"When submitting patches created by a tool, everyone who does so submits them with wording like 'found by tool XXX, we are not sure if this is correct or not, please advise." which is NOT what you did here at all," he wrote.
"Because of this, I will now have to ban all future contributions from your University and rip out your previous contributions, as they were obviously submitted in bad-faith with the intent to cause problems."
Torvalds added: "It's also annoying, because most of the patches are valid (and the ones that aren't are generally 'useless' rather than 'actively malicious'), so it's basically a huge waste of people's time to now go over those things again just because one source has shown itself to not be above board."
The university's Mats Heimdahl and Loren Terveen, head and deputy head respectively of the university's Department of Computer Science, put out a media statement after the story broke, saying: "Leadership in the University of Minnesota Department of Computer Science & Engineering learned today about the details of research being conducted by one of its faculty members and graduate students into the security of the Linux kernel.
"The research method used raised serious concerns in the Linux kernel community and, as of today, this has resulted in the University being banned from contributing to the Linux kernel.
"We take this situation extremely seriously. We have immediately suspended this line of research. We will investigate the research method and the process by which this research method was approved, determine appropriate remedial action, and safeguard against future issues, if needed."
Heimdahl and Terveen will issue a report about the incident as soon as they could, saying: "We will report our findings back to the community as soon as practical."