Dan Bornstein
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danfuzz.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
Dan Bornstein
@danfuzz.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
Virtual Machinist. Loves coffee and noise. May or may not be working on an operating system.

[bridged from https://mastodon.social/@danfuzz on the fediverse by https://fed.brid.gy/ ]
RE: https://mastodon.social/@mhoye/115721201750348104

Remember when you could get a USB data cable that didn't necessarily have a CPU[*] in it? I miss those days.

[*] or something physically indistinguishable from one
mastodon.social
December 16, 2025 at 3:09 PM
Reposted by Dan Bornstein
It died out before implementation, just by math of actuarial tables and demographics alone. That’s the cruelty of Brexit: it was and is a suppression of the majority by a dying minority, both figuratively and literally. https://wandering.shop/@cstross/115690455206049105
Charlie Stross (@[email protected])
Pro-Brexit Majority Of 2016 'Has Literally Died Out', Polling Expert Reveals The founder of YouGov said there is now an 8.1 million majority in favour of rejoining the EU. (Also: National Bureau of Economic Research recently claimed: “By the start of 2025, the UK economy was approximately 8% smaller than it would have been without Brexit.”) https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/ex-polling-chief-pro-brexit-majority-has-literally-died-out_uk_6937e297e4b064dbeef01ee4
wandering.shop
December 9, 2025 at 5:45 PM
I am pleased as punch to release Lactoserv v0.9.4, which is the third stable release of the v0.9.* series. Lactoserv is a web application backend toolkit and standalone web server, written in Node. This release is all about updating dependencies (and required just one minor code change).

* […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
December 9, 2025 at 6:04 PM
Earthquake tooters: ACTIVATE!
December 8, 2025 at 10:57 PM
News: Netflix to acquire WB.

Me: Ugh, that can't be good. I hope it doesn't go through.

Monkey's paw: [finger curls]
December 8, 2025 at 8:57 PM
Reposted by Dan Bornstein
The package manager in GitHub Actions might be the worst package manager in use today: https://nesbitt.io/2025/12/06/github-actions-package-manager.html
GitHub Actions Has a Package Manager, and It Might Be the Worst
After putting together ecosyste-ms/package-manager-resolvers, I started wondering what dependency resolution algorithm GitHub Actions uses. When you write `uses: actions/checkout@v4` in a workflow file, you’re declaring a dependency. GitHub resolves it, downloads it, and executes it. That’s package management. So I went spelunking into the runner codebase to see how it works. What I found was concerning. Package managers are a critical part of software supply chain security. The industry has spent years hardening them after incidents like left-pad, event-stream, and countless others. Lockfiles, integrity hashes, and dependency visibility aren’t optional extras. They’re the baseline. GitHub Actions ignores all of it. Compared to mature package ecosystems: Feature | npm | Cargo | NuGet | Bundler | Go | Actions ---|---|---|---|---|---|--- Lockfile | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ Transitive pinning | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ Integrity hashes | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ Dependency tree visibility | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ Resolution specification | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ The core problem is the lack of a lockfile. Every other package manager figured this out decades ago: you declare loose constraints in a manifest, the resolver picks specific versions, and the lockfile records exactly what was chosen. GitHub Actions has no equivalent. Every run re-resolves from your workflow file, and the results can change without any modification to your code. Research from USENIX Security 2022 analyzed over 200,000 repositories and found that 99.7% execute externally developed Actions, 97% use Actions from unverified creators, and 18% run Actions with missing security updates. The researchers identified four fundamental security properties that CI/CD systems need: admittance control, execution control, code control, and access to secrets. GitHub Actions fails to provide adequate tooling for any of them. A follow-up study using static taint analysis found code injection vulnerabilities in over 4,300 workflows across 2.7 million analyzed. Nearly every GitHub Actions user is running third-party code with no verification, no lockfile, and no visibility into what that code depends on. **Mutable versions.** When you pin to `actions/checkout@v4`, that tag can move. The maintainer can push a new commit and retag. Your workflow changes silently. A lockfile would record the SHA that `@v4` resolved to, giving you reproducibility while keeping version tags readable. Instead, you have to choose: readable tags with no stability, or unreadable SHAs with no automated update path. GitHub has added mitigations. Immutable releases lock a release’s git tag after publication. Organizations can enforce SHA pinning as a policy. You can limit workflows to actions from verified creators. These help, but they only address the top-level dependency. They do nothing for transitive dependencies, which is the primary attack vector. **Invisible transitive dependencies.** SHA pinning doesn’t solve this. Composite actions resolve their own dependencies, but you can’t see or control what they pull in. When you pin an action to a SHA, you only lock the outer file. If it internally pulls `some-helper@v1` with a mutable tag, your workflow is still vulnerable. You have zero visibility into this. A lockfile would record the entire resolved tree, making transitive dependencies visible and pinnable. Research on JavaScript Actions found that 54% contain at least one security weakness, with most vulnerabilities coming from indirect dependencies. The tj-actions/changed-files incident showed how this plays out in practice: a compromised action updated its transitive dependencies to exfiltrate secrets. With a lockfile, the unexpected transitive change would have been visible in a diff. **No integrity verification.** npm records `integrity` hashes in the lockfile. Cargo records checksums in `Cargo.lock`. When you install, the package manager verifies the download matches what was recorded. Actions has nothing. You trust GitHub to give you the right code for a SHA. A lockfile with integrity hashes would let you verify that what you’re running matches what you resolved. **Re-runs aren’t reproducible.** GitHub staff have confirmed this explicitly: “if the workflow uses some actions at a version, if that version was force pushed/updated, we will be fetching the latest version there.” A failed job re-run can silently get different code than the original run. Cache interaction makes it worse: caches only save on successful jobs, so a re-run after a force-push gets different code _and_ has to rebuild the cache. Two sources of non-determinism compounding. A lockfile would make re-runs deterministic: same lockfile, same code, every time. **No dependency tree visibility.** npm has `npm ls`. Cargo has `cargo tree`. You can inspect your full dependency graph, find duplicates, trace how a transitive dependency got pulled in. Actions gives you nothing. You can’t see what your workflow actually depends on without manually reading every composite action’s source. A lockfile would be a complete manifest of your dependency tree. **Undocumented resolution semantics.** Every package manager documents how dependency resolution works. npm has a spec. Cargo has a spec. Actions resolution is undocumented. The runner source is public, and the entire “resolution algorithm” is in ActionManager.cs. Here’s a simplified version of what it does: // Simplified from actions/runner ActionManager.cs async Task PrepareActionsAsync(steps) { // Start fresh every time - no caching DeleteDirectory("_work/_actions"); await PrepareActionsRecursiveAsync(steps, depth: 0); } async Task PrepareActionsRecursiveAsync(actions, depth) { if (depth > 10) throw new Exception("Composite action depth exceeded max depth 10"); foreach (var action in actions) { // Resolution happens on GitHub's server - opaque to us var downloadInfo = await GetDownloadInfoFromGitHub(action.Reference); // Download and extract - no integrity verification var tarball = await Download(downloadInfo.TarballUrl); Extract(tarball, $"_actions/{action.Owner}/{action.Repo}/{downloadInfo.Sha}"); // If composite, recurse into its dependencies var actionYml = Parse($"_actions/{action.Owner}/{action.Repo}/{downloadInfo.Sha}/action.yml"); if (actionYml.Type == "composite") { // These nested actions may use mutable tags - we have no control await PrepareActionsRecursiveAsync(actionYml.Steps, depth + 1); } } } That’s it. No version constraints, no deduplication (the same action referenced twice gets downloaded twice), no integrity checks. The tarball URL comes from GitHub’s API, and you trust them to return the right content for the SHA. A lockfile wouldn’t fix the missing spec, but it would at least give you a concrete record of what resolution produced. Even setting lockfiles aside, Actions has other issues that proper package managers solved long ago. **No registry.** Actions live in git repositories. There’s no central index, no security scanning, no malware detection, no typosquatting prevention. A real registry can flag malicious packages, store immutable copies independent of the source, and provide a single point for security response. The Marketplace exists but it’s a thin layer over repository search. Without a registry, there’s nowhere for immutable metadata to live. If an action’s source repository disappears or gets compromised, there’s no fallback. **Shared mutable environment.** Actions aren’t sandboxed from each other. Two actions calling `setup-node` with different versions mutate the same `$PATH`. The outcome depends on execution order, not any deterministic resolution. **No offline support.** Actions are pulled from GitHub on every run. There’s no offline installation mode, no vendoring mechanism, no way to run without network access. Other package managers let you vendor dependencies or set up private mirrors. With Actions, if GitHub is down, your CI is down. **The namespace is GitHub usernames.** Anyone who creates a GitHub account owns that namespace for actions. Account takeovers and typosquatting are possible. When a popular action maintainer’s account gets compromised, attackers can push malicious code and retag. A lockfile with integrity hashes wouldn’t prevent account takeovers, but it would detect when the code changes unexpectedly. The hash mismatch would fail the build instead of silently running attacker-controlled code. Another option would be something like Go’s checksum database, a transparent log of known-good hashes that catches when the same version suddenly has different contents. ### How Did We Get Here? The Actions runner is forked from Azure DevOps, designed for enterprises with controlled internal task libraries where you trust your pipeline tasks. GitHub bolted a public marketplace onto that foundation without rethinking the trust model. The addition of composite actions and reusable workflows created a dependency system, but the implementation ignored lessons from package management: lockfiles, integrity verification, transitive pinning, dependency visibility. This matters beyond CI/CD. Trusted publishing is being rolled out across package registries: PyPI, npm, RubyGems, and others now let you publish packages directly from GitHub Actions using OIDC tokens instead of long-lived secrets. OIDC removes one class of attacks (stolen credentials) but amplifies another: the supply chain security of these registries now depends entirely on GitHub Actions, a system that lacks the lockfile and integrity controls these registries themselves require. A compromise in your workflow’s action dependencies can lead to malicious packages on registries with better security practices than the system they’re trusting to publish. Other CI systems have done better. GitLab CI added an `integrity` keyword in version 17.9 that lets you specify a SHA256 hash for remote includes. If the hash doesn’t match, the pipeline fails. Their documentation explicitly warns that including remote configs “is similar to pulling a third-party dependency” and recommends pinning to full commit SHAs. GitLab recognized the problem and shipped integrity verification. GitHub closed the feature request. GitHub’s design choices don’t just affect GitHub users. Forgejo Actions maintains compatibility with GitHub Actions, which means projects migrating to Codeberg for ethical reasons inherit the same broken CI architecture. The Forgejo maintainers openly acknowledge the problems, with contributors calling GitHub Actions’ ecosystem “terribly designed and executed.” But they’re stuck maintaining compatibility with it. Codeberg mirrors common actions to reduce GitHub dependency, but the fundamental issues are baked into the model itself. GitHub’s design flaws are spreading to the alternatives. GitHub issue #2195 requested lockfile support. It was closed as “not planned” in 2022. Palo Alto’s “Unpinnable Actions” research documented how even SHA-pinned actions can have unpinnable transitive dependencies. Dependabot can update action versions, which helps. Some teams vendor actions into their own repos. zizmor is excellent at scanning workflows and finding security issues. But these are workarounds for a system that lacks the basics. The fix is a lockfile. Record resolved SHAs for every action reference, including transitives. Add integrity hashes. Make the dependency tree inspectable. GitHub closed the request three years ago and hasn’t revisited it. * * * **Further reading:** * Characterizing the Security of GitHub CI Workflows - Koishybayev et al., USENIX Security 2022 * ARGUS: A Framework for Staged Static Taint Analysis of GitHub Workflows and Actions - Muralee et al., USENIX Security 2023 * New GitHub Action supply chain attack: reviewdog/action-setup - Wiz Research, 2025 * Unpinnable Actions: How Malicious Code Can Sneak into Your GitHub Actions Workflows * GitHub Actions Worm: Compromising GitHub Repositories Through the Actions Dependency Tree * setup-python: Action can be compromised via mutable dependency
nesbitt.io
December 6, 2025 at 1:21 PM
Perk of this neighborhood: Free gutter cleaning!

#corvidfren #freeguttercleaning #gratuitoushashtag
December 7, 2025 at 5:18 PM
"Hooded Oriole" by Talavera-Ballón. Corner of 18th and South Van Ness, SF CA.

https://www.talavera-ballon.com/
December 4, 2025 at 8:54 PM
Reposted by Dan Bornstein
I would not have guessed this was possible!

Vladan Majerech has found a one-dimensional spaceship in the Game of Life: a pattern just one cell high and 3,707,300,605 cells wide that, after 133,076,755,768 generations (during which it is not confined to the one-dimensional line, of course) […]
Original post on mathstodon.xyz
mathstodon.xyz
December 3, 2025 at 3:54 AM
Reposted by Dan Bornstein
Reflecting on this point by @pluralistic: THREAD 1/n

"The whole point of the conservative project is to take away choices, and corral us into “preferences” that we disprefer. Eliminate no-fault divorce, suppress the vote, gerrymander the electoral map, cram a binding arbi­tration clause into […]
Original post on mastodon.green
mastodon.green
November 30, 2025 at 8:00 PM
Reposted by Dan Bornstein
Seen on Reddit:

"42 is just old people 6 7"

And... well... yeah. Can't really argue.
November 27, 2025 at 6:44 PM
Reposted by Dan Bornstein
Garry Kasparov on the Ukraine "piece" plan.

www.thenextmove.org/p/diplomacy-...
November 26, 2025 at 9:36 PM
"Our entire safety net is designed to catch people at the very bottom, but it sets a trap for anyone trying to climb out. As income rises from $40,000 to $100,000, benefits disappear faster than wages increase."

TLDR: It's reasonable to claim that the actual poverty line in the US today is […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
November 26, 2025 at 5:22 PM
ALERT! New video from Open Reel Ensemble!

https://youtu.be/iEcZ6vjjJM4
November 20, 2025 at 10:51 PM
Reposted by Dan Bornstein
I had the displeasure of reading an article in the Harvard student paper by an economics major who said in apparent seriousness that comp sci majors are wasting time on theory classes like “Introduction to Algorithms and their Limitations” when they could be learning REAL skills like prompt […]
Original post on infosec.exchange
infosec.exchange
November 18, 2025 at 6:22 PM
Reposted by Dan Bornstein
Chatting with a friend about Cloudflare's intermittent outages today, they brought up an interesting point: How many organizations have started relying on Cloudflare to do basic security blocking and tackling stuff, like stopping SQL injection attacks at the edge? Maybe your devs were lazy at […]
Original post on infosec.exchange
infosec.exchange
November 18, 2025 at 4:52 PM
Reposted by Dan Bornstein
Okay, but hear me out, what if we produce an entire generation of students who are *all* the ones who did nothing in the group project?
November 13, 2025 at 5:03 AM
Reposted by Dan Bornstein
ChatGPT Temporary Chat feature seems to work flawlessly.
November 10, 2025 at 1:27 AM
"The…Surrender Caucus… thought they were sparing their constituents some present pain, but they are actually dooming them to far worse pain later. And the surrender was a slap in the face to all who suffered to get us this far." — @jaykuo

https://statuskuo.substack.com/p/the-surrender-caucus
The Surrender Caucus
Eight Democrats crossed the party line to vote with the Republicans to clear a key procedural hurdle to ending the shutdown.
statuskuo.substack.com
November 10, 2025 at 6:43 PM
Reposted by Dan Bornstein
“Most of the days the federal government has ever been shut down, Donald Trump was the president.”— @howtoreadthisch.art
www.howtoreadthisch.art/red-versus-b...
November 8, 2025 at 11:54 PM
Earthquake tooters: ACTIVATE!
November 9, 2025 at 5:42 PM
Reposted by Dan Bornstein
The moms of Montgomery County don't like Bethany Mandel because she's a jerk to trans kids, and that tells a lot about America's political realignment.
The “Likable”/“Unlikable” Political Realignment
American conservatism is a home for unlikeable people who’ve turned their unlinkability into a political project.
www.aaronrosspowell.com
November 7, 2025 at 5:51 PM
My local young gentleman wanted to share this drawing of a hepteract (seven-dimensional hypercube) on social media, and I hereby oblige.
November 5, 2025 at 4:02 PM
Reposted by Dan Bornstein
Absolutely amazing: they've got so much solar in Australia that they need more people to use more of it, so the gov't has instructed energy retailers to offer *at least three hours of free power* during the middle of the day.

Meanwhile fossil-addled US struggles with an energy-price crisis ...
Energy retailers to be directed to offer free power three hours a day
Saying there is enough solar power for everyone in the daytime, Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen will direct retailers to provide three hours of free power every day to consumers.
www.abc.net.au
November 3, 2025 at 8:18 PM