A mitigated (CPU) vulnerability is still present and might be just harder to exploit. Using blue as colour for them does not illustrate their dangerousness - orange is a better choice as far as I am concerned. Scaring people away from Intel processors will be a completely unintended side effect. :-) Signed-off-by: Peter Müller --- html/cgi-bin/vulnerabilities.cgi | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/html/cgi-bin/vulnerabilities.cgi b/html/cgi-bin/vulnerabilities.cgi index a8746c30c..21d963618 100644 --- a/html/cgi-bin/vulnerabilities.cgi +++ b/html/cgi-bin/vulnerabilities.cgi @@ -129,7 +129,7 @@ for my $vuln (sort keys %VULNERABILITIES) { } elsif ($status eq "Mitigation") { $status_message = $Lang::tr{'mitigated'}; $colour = "white"; - $bgcolour = ${Header::colourblue}; + $bgcolour = ${Header::colourorange}; # Unknown report from kernel } else { -- 2.16.4