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Re: Lilupophilupop [message #176609 is a reply to message #176605] Wed, 11 January 2012 13:42 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
Jerry Stuckle is currently offline  Jerry Stuckle
Messages: 2598
Registered: September 2010
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On 1/11/2012 3:29 AM, M. Strobel wrote:
> Am 11.01.2012 01:31, schrieb Peter H. Coffin:
>> On Sat, 07 Jan 2012 18:27:15 +0100, Thomas Mlynarczyk wrote:
>>
>>> Jerry Stuckle schrieb:
>>>
>>>> Validating all input from the user is just good programming practice.
>>>
>>> And properly (!) escaping output (this includes stuff that goes into
>>> SQL queries). As I see it, these two simple measures should prevent
>>> 99% of all security vulnerabilities. I'd be interested in learning
>>> about the remaining 1% though.
>>>
>>>> Nothing new here - it just shows there are a lot of programmers out
>>>> there unconcerned with security.
>>>
>>> Indeed. But I don't understand why this is so. After all, we're not
>>> talking about the personal homepage of some newbie showing pictures
>>> of his dog and favourite cookie recipes. The problem exists also (if
>>> not especially) with real big professional sites, even sites where
>>> security is paramount (online banking), run by people who should have
>>> more than enough money to pay competent, security-aware programmers to
>>> do the job properly. I just don't get it.
>>
>> Good programmers and idiots are indistinguishable to anyone that is not
>> a good programmer. The people making the hiring decisions are not good
>> programmers. Ergo, idiots and good programmers get hired in proportion
>> to the frequency of each in the job market, and the idiots move on to
>> other positions far more frequently, voluntarily or involuntarily.
>>
>> Which also means that even if good programmers and idiots are in roughly
>> equal measure, the good programmers are not in the market for new jobs
>> nearly as often, make up a smaller portion of the market, and
>> not-programmers are unlikely to hire them by accident.
>>
>
> I agree.
>
> But beware the fallacy of the single cause. Good programmers and
> idiots can change under certain conditions - learn and un-learn
> good programming.
>
> And even good programmers make compromises in their code under
> the pressure of time-to-market.
>
> /Str.

Good programmers never need to make compromises which affect the quality
of the code, no matter what the pressure.

And the number of years one has been programming is not an indication of
the quality of the programmer.


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Jerry Stuckle
JDS Computer Training Corp.
jstucklex(at)attglobal(dot)net
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