On 2024-02-29, a PR was sent to stop linking liblzma into libsystemd [0].
Kevin Beaumont speculated [1] that "Jia Tan" saw this and immediately realized it would have neutered the backdoor and thus began to rush to avoid losing the very significant amount of work that went into this exploit; I think he's right. That rush caused the crashing seen in 5.6.0 and the lack of polish which could have eliminated or reduced the performance regressions which were the entire reason this was caught in the first place; they simply didn't have the time because the window had started to close and they didn't want all their work to be for nothing.
Kevin Beaumont speculated [1] that "Jia Tan" saw this and immediately realized it would have neutered the backdoor and thus began to rush to avoid losing the very significant amount of work that went into this exploit; I think he's right. That rush caused the crashing seen in 5.6.0 and the lack of polish which could have eliminated or reduced the performance regressions which were the entire reason this was caught in the first place; they simply didn't have the time because the window had started to close and they didn't want all their work to be for nothing.
[0]: https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/31550
[1]: https://doublepulsar.com/inside-the-failed-attempt-to-backdo...