#Ventoy Security Concerns (please boost for visibility)

Ventoy is a popular utility for making USB drives containing multiple operating systems in the form of bootable image files. While very useful in theory, the source tree contains numerous binary blobs without source code. This issue has been brought up to the authors multiple times, have not been corrected, and have even gotten worse (more blobs have been added to the code over time). This is a potential malware vector, similar to the "test files" in the xz-utils backdoor catastrophe.

Recently the author has ignored a very lengthy thread raising security concerns because of these binary blobs. Given the amount of attention the thread has gotten, this seems strange, especially given that the authors have been active since then. https://github.com/ventoy/Ventoy/issues/2795

Stranger yet still, a video by Veronica Explains (@vkc) on how to create bootable USB flash drives got flooded by comments heavily suggesting the use of Ventoy and even being somewhat accusing because Veronica didn't advertise Ventoy. This is... not anything I've seen users of ANY open-source project do, and it feels similar to the social engineering done against Lasse Collin that convinced him to add Jia Tan as a maintainer, thus compromising xz-utils. See the comments of https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QiSXClZauXA&t=3s

If you're using Ventoy, you may want to consider ceasing its use for the time being out of an abundance of caution. If you truly need its functionality, you might look into something like the IODD SSD Enclosure (https://www.iodd.shop/HDD/SSD-Enclosure) which can emulate an optical drive and allows you to select an ISO saved to the drive to boot from.

#linux #boot #security #malicious #backdoor

[issue]: Remove BLOBs from the source tree · Issue #2795 · ventoy/Ventoy

What happened? Due to the recent XZ-Utils drama I checked the code and I'm appalled. There are more BLOBS than source code. https://github.com/ventoy/Ventoy/tree/3f65f0ef03e4aebcd14f233ca808a4f8946...

GitHub

@arraybolt3 @vkc

ah HA! I was trying to remember WTF that device was called! I remember seeing it in passing but couldn't remember what it was called when I went to look for it again.

Since it's just a mass storage device, I'm assuming it supports Linux out-of-the-box right? No silly windows-only binaries needed?

@cdp1337 @arraybolt3 @vkc I have a 400, and I seem to recall that I had to resort to Windows to create the NTFS file system on the drive, none of the Linux tools seemed to create it just so that the firmware would like it
Similar with virtual disk images (for USB stick emulation), while qemu-img can make these the firmware doesn't seem to like them, ones made from Windows work.
Apart from this its a great tool, and I wish I had known about it 10 years ago.

@Lalufu @arraybolt3 @vkc
@eickmeyer

My ST300 just came in today; slapped in a spare 1TB drive and it fired right up in Gnome Disks. Seems to be working just fine, though we'll see how usable it is when something blows up and I have to load up gparted while in a panic. :P