The Open Source Advantage in Secure Application Development
The security benefits and risks of Open Source code is one of the most debated topics in information security today. The views of proponents of the Open Source model are typified by Eric Raymond's argument that Open Source software is intrinsically more secure since its open nature lets a greater number of programmers view the source code and uncover potential security threats before they're released to the wild.
Fewer people see closed source software, on the other hand, and so the odds of uncovering a potential security threat before a system cracker finds it is diminished. Opponents of this model argue that the source code availability of Open Source software lets crackers search the code for potential exploits and provides them a useful way to design attacks. They argue that this makes closed source software intrinsically more secure by way of the principle of security through obscurity.
Part of the reason that no clear consensus will be reached on this issue any time soon is that both arguments have elements of truth to them.
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