We don't always need a guarantee sometimes improvement is enough:ġ) Given that there have been plenty of discoveries of problems (e.g. However, don't forget, "the perfect is the enemy of the good". When you say "Openness of the code does not guarantee." you are 100% right. Notice especially the bits where malware is disguised as small programming bugs. How many qualified specialists, with serious math background, do you think are out there looking through complex encryption functions checking through flaws in math? Ever heard of Obfuscated C Code Contests? Openness of the code does not guarantee absence of backdoors even if the code does get a lot of eyeballs looking at it.įirstly if the Obfuscated C Code scares you then I guess you should look up the underhanded C contest. Even if it's fully open, with 0 binary blobs.
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