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view the rest of the comments
https://fieldeffect.com/blog/mikrotik-devices-risk-super-admin-elevation-flaw
https://thehackernews.com/2023/07/critical-mikrotik-routeros.html?m=1
https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/super-admin-elevation-bug-puts-900-000-mikrotik-devices-at-risk/
So first of all I see no point in sharing multiple articles that contain the same copy-pasted info, one of those would have been enough. That aside, again, patches were made available before the vulnerability was published and things like MikroTik not pushing Updates being arguably more of a feature since automatic updates cause network downtime via a reboot and that would be somewhat problematic for networking equipment. Could they have handled that better? Yes, you can almost always handle vulnerabilities better but their handling of it was not so eggregious as to warrant completely avoiding them in the future.
Well because one is WAY WORSE than the other, and the response of commitment is way different. You're just plain wrong.
If I buy a switch and that thing decides to give me downtime in order to auto update I can tell you what lands on my blacklist. Auto-Updates absoultely increase security but there are certain use cases where they are more of a hindrance than a feature, want proof? Not even Cisco does Auto-Update by default (from what I've managed to find in this short time neither does TrendNet which you've been speaking well of). The device on its own deciding to just fuck off and pull down your network is not in any way a feature their customers would want. If you don't want the (slight) maintenance load that comes with an active switch do not get one, get a passive one instead.