Depends on your perspective I suppose. One good reason might be that it means more hardware is supported. A bad one might be that it increases the overall attack surface from a security point of view.
A great deal of work is going into this area. In fact, I believe there’s quite a few parties using LLMs to look for security bugs, and the US Department of defense had a multimillion dollar competition to motivate just that.
My opinion is this isn’t a problem. There’s a lot of hardware out there, and the vast majority of that code isn’t going to be loaded into any one kernel installation.
is this a good thing or an issue? I just play RuneScape -~-
Depends on your perspective I suppose. One good reason might be that it means more hardware is supported. A bad one might be that it increases the overall attack surface from a security point of view.
I’d like to see them hire some formal methods people to at least formally verify crucial parts of it.
It might actually also be good to analyze it with an LLM to identify any hidden problem areas.
I’m interested to hear why my idea is probably foolish as well, though.
A great deal of work is going into this area. In fact, I believe there’s quite a few parties using LLMs to look for security bugs, and the US Department of defense had a multimillion dollar competition to motivate just that.
My opinion is this isn’t a problem. There’s a lot of hardware out there, and the vast majority of that code isn’t going to be loaded into any one kernel installation.
An issue for sure. Larger code is never good.