|
|
|
|
|
by sillysaurus3
3282 days ago
|
|
In the real world, one of the only reasons people get pentests is because another company is forcing them to. That results in a document saying company B is secure. This is a very effective approach at cutting through ass-covering. Company B has to fix the security problems uncovered in the pentest. There is no other option. And I've seen it take products from "SQL injection by typing an apostrophe" to "It'd be very difficult to exploit this app." If that's not proof that pentsts are effective, then I'm not sure what would be. We like to say that security is a mindset, but developers have way too much on their mind to be aware of every possible security vector. It's easier and more effective to punt and let us worry about it instead. |
|