petsoitoLinux@lemmy.ml·5 months agoLinux Kernel 6.8 Reaches End of Life, Users Should Upgrade to Linux Kernel 6.9(9to5linux.com)external-linkarrow-up1160arrow-down15message-square25fedilink
arrow-up1155arrow-down1external-linkLinux Kernel 6.8 Reaches End of Life, Users Should Upgrade to Linux Kernel 6.9(9to5linux.com)petsoitoLinux@lemmy.ml·5 months agomessage-square25fedilink
minus-squareAuliEnglisharrow-up3arrow-down3·5 months agolinkfedilinkAnd the older they are the less secure they are. LTS are not as great as people think. https://ciq.com/blog/why-a-frozen-linux-kernel-isnt-the-safest-choice-for-security/
minus-squarejonaswarrow-up7arrow-down0·5 months agolinkfedilinkThe article is about frozen vendor kernels, not about.LTS
minus-squareSuccessful_Try543arrow-up5arrow-down0·5 months agolinkfedilinkTwo different things. LTS kernels get security patches until their support is dropped.
minus-squarejonaswarrow-up5arrow-down0·5 months agolinkfedilinkYeah that’s the whole point of LTS, so it stays compatible with that kernel version but still gets important updates, but no feature updates
And the older they are the less secure they are. LTS are not as great as people think. https://ciq.com/blog/why-a-frozen-linux-kernel-isnt-the-safest-choice-for-security/
The article is about frozen vendor kernels, not about.LTS
Two different things. LTS kernels get security patches until their support is dropped.
Yeah that’s the whole point of LTS, so it stays compatible with that kernel version but still gets important updates, but no feature updates