Is there no connection between 2025 funding cuts and previous ones? e.g. If a year of work after the previous cuts resulted in an open-data collaboration between NVD and commercial vendors to share a subset of CC0 vulnerability metadata, could that industry collective now argue for government to share (with companies) the burden of funding an open, decentralized program for CVE tracking? Commercial vendors could still offer additional metadata and analytics, over and above the public baseline.
> A bipartisan bill that would establish a nonprofit foundation aimed at boosting private-sector partnerships at the National Institute of Standards and Technology was reintroduced in the House and the Senate.. the proposed foundation structure was described as replicating similar nonprofits that support public-private partnerships at other science agencies.. we encourage a strategy that leverages NIST’s leadership and expertise on standards development, voluntary frameworks, public-private sector collaboration, and international harmonization.. NIST’s funding has been in focus following a budget cut of roughly 12% to $1.46 billion in fiscal year 2024.
Edit_2: is there a shortage of database rows, or people to write a shell script? Why not pre-allocate N CVE IDs for every CNA, while a new plan is worked out? At least one random commercial vendor could foresee the shutdown early enough to reserve CVEs.
> Garrity posted on LinkedIn, “Given the current uncertainty surrounding which services at MITRE or within the CVE Program may be affected, VulnCheck has proactively reserved 1,000 CVEs for 2025,” adding that Vulncheck “will continue to provide CVE assignments to the community in the days and weeks ahead.”
> A coalition of longtime, active CVE Board members have spent the past year developing a strategy to transition CVE to a dedicated, non-profit foundation. The new CVE Foundation will focus solely on continuing the mission of delivering high-quality vulnerability identification and maintaining the integrity and availability of CVE data for defenders worldwide. “CVE, as a cornerstone of the global cybersecurity ecosystem, is too important to be vulnerable itself,” said Kent Landfield, an officer of the Foundation.
Edit_1: found a proposed bill, April 2025, https://fedscoop.com/public-private-partnerships-bill-nist-h...
> A bipartisan bill that would establish a nonprofit foundation aimed at boosting private-sector partnerships at the National Institute of Standards and Technology was reintroduced in the House and the Senate.. the proposed foundation structure was described as replicating similar nonprofits that support public-private partnerships at other science agencies.. we encourage a strategy that leverages NIST’s leadership and expertise on standards development, voluntary frameworks, public-private sector collaboration, and international harmonization.. NIST’s funding has been in focus following a budget cut of roughly 12% to $1.46 billion in fiscal year 2024.
Edit_2: is there a shortage of database rows, or people to write a shell script? Why not pre-allocate N CVE IDs for every CNA, while a new plan is worked out? At least one random commercial vendor could foresee the shutdown early enough to reserve CVEs.
> Garrity posted on LinkedIn, “Given the current uncertainty surrounding which services at MITRE or within the CVE Program may be affected, VulnCheck has proactively reserved 1,000 CVEs for 2025,” adding that Vulncheck “will continue to provide CVE assignments to the community in the days and weeks ahead.”