Red Hat gives Ubuntu a bootc up the backside at Canonical shindig

**TL;DR:** Red Hat gives Ubuntu a bootc up the backside at Canonical shindig

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What we know

UBUNTU SUMMIT At a Canonical event, we didn't expect a presentation on using Red Hat's container management tools, but if this is something you might need, it does sound useful. 04, Red Hat Principal Software Engineer Joseph Marrero Corchado presented a talk called Bootc: Use your container knowledge and infrastructure to build and deploy your Ubuntu hosts. Although Ubuntu is very strong in the desktop Linux space, in large corporate server environments, Ubuntu is just another distro among many.

This can be a good thing: it is just another Linux distro, and that means that it's perfectly possible to deploy and manage it using existing FOSS tooling. Marrero introduced himself by saying that he works at Red Hat, but personally runs Ubuntu – and has been doing so for long enough that he has some original media from Canonical's ShipIt program, which the company discontinued in 2011. While we were surpised to see a Red Hat engineer presenting a talk at the summit, it's not unprecedented.

_OS distro is based on Ubuntu, but it overlaps with other distros as well. It has its own desktop and eschews Snap for Flatpak – and yet, at the previous Summit, Syste

Source: The Register

Context

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Why this matters

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What to watch next

Watch for primary-source confirmation, changelog entries, and whether vendors publish remediation or rollout timelines.

Practical takeaways

1) Treat unconfirmed claims as provisional. 2) Check official statements before changing security or spending decisions. 3) Save links and dates so you can verify updates later.

FAQ

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Last updated: June 16, 2026.

Additional context: early-cycle stories often look bigger in headlines than in day-to-day impact. The useful move is to identify the smallest set of facts that would change your decision, then wait for those facts to land.

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