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Re: Oracle - the last word


From: Stefano Di Paola <stefano.dipaola () wisec it>
Date: Thu, 11 May 2006 21:17:18 +0200

Il giorno mer, 10-05-2006 alle 18:28 -0400, Steven M. Christey ha
scritto:
David Litchfield said:

When Oracle 10g Release 1 was released you could spend a day looking
for bugs and find thirty. When 10g Release 2 was released I had to
spend two weeks looking to find the same number.

This increasing level of effort is likely happening for other major
widely audited software products, too.  It would be a very useful data
point if researchers could publicly quantify how much time and effort
they needed to find the issues (note: this is not my idea, it came out
of various other discussions.)  Level of effort might provide a more
concrete answer to the question "how secure is software X?"

Maybe then you will have to answer to the question: "How skilled are
security researchers?" or better "how well they slept last night?".
I think software security is more measurable than human skill
(deterministic vs. chaotic systems)...

But at this point I have a some thoughts about words semantic ...maybe
there's a real inner tautology thinking that programmers are human
beings...

Some researchers might not want to publicize this kind of information,
but this would be one great way to help us move away from the
primitive practice of counting the number of reported vulnerabilities.

Correct me if i'm wrong but Rfpolicy didn't say a word about this ;)

(and while I'm talking about quantifying researcher effort, it might
be highly illustrative to measure how much time is spent in dealing
with vendors during disclosure.)

This could be a better point of view as David said.
And are really software certifications talking about quality?
IMHO they don't. 
Fake certification expose us to bad developed code, but maybe process
certifications (if applied) could mitigate risks.

0.002 Euro from my wallet

Stefano

- Steve

-- 

......---oOOo--------oOOo---......
Stefano Di Paola
Software Engineer
Email: stefano.dipaola_at_wisec.it
Email: stefano.dipaola1_at_tin.it
Web: www.wisec.it
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