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by AJ007
1014 days ago
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This is what is referred to as "security through obscurity." If companies are going to publish/sell closed source software to the general public, and make any claims regarding it's security, that should provide more than enough consent to probe it. |
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The idea of absolute ownership is being eroded. You purchase a device but that device may use information you do not own. If you are manipulating the device to allow it to give you information you did not purchase and the contract you agreed to with the purchase was that you would not do this, then that is threatening. If what you learn by probing it allows you to breach the security of other people using the same service, then that is threatening.
If you are concerned about the device, I don't understand why we can't live in a world where you are able to vocalize that and give the device provider a chance for feedback before probing it for weaknesses.
If there is a security concern that you want to shine a light on, why is it that we need to address that concern in the dark? It is giving too much unnecessary overlap with people looking to exploit those security issues when we might not need to