A Case Study on Software Vulnerability Coordination
Jukka Ruohonen, Sampsa Rauti, Sami Hyrynsalmi, Ville Lepp\"anen

TL;DR
This study analyzes the delays in coordinating and publishing CVEs for open source projects, revealing social network and infrastructure factors significantly influence the timeliness of vulnerability disclosures.
Contribution
It models CVE coordination delays using regression analysis across social, infrastructural, and technical dimensions, providing insights into factors affecting vulnerability disclosure timelines.
Findings
Coordination delays are influenced by social network and infrastructure factors.
Control metrics and network degrees have strong effects on delays.
Technical characteristics have weaker but detectable effects.
Abstract
Context: Coordination is a fundamental tenet of software engineering. Coordination is required also for identifying discovered and disclosed software vulnerabilities with Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs). Motivated by recent practical challenges, this paper examines the coordination of CVEs for open source projects through a public mailing list. Objective: The paper observes the historical time delays between the assignment of CVEs on a mailing list and the later appearance of these in the National Vulnerability Database (NVD). Drawing from research on software engineering coordination, software vulnerabilities, and bug tracking, the delays are modeled through three dimensions: social networks and communication practices, tracking infrastructures, and the technical characteristics of the CVEs coordinated. Method: Given a period between 2008 and 2016, a sample of over five…
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