I have observed an interesting behavior in that the vast majority of IT
executives still haven't heard about the principles behind secure
coding. My take says that we are publishing information in all the wrong
places. IT executives don't really read ACM, IEEE or other the sporadic
posting from blo
Local boy makes good
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB112128453130584810,00-search.html
-gp
On 11/15/07 10:25 AM, "McGovern, James F (HTSC, IT)"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have observed an interesting behavior in that the vast majority of IT
> executives still haven't heard about the pri
McGovern, James F (HTSC, IT) wrote:
> I have observed an interesting behavior in that the vast majority of IT
> executives still haven't heard about the principles behind secure
> coding. My take says that we are publishing information in all the wrong
> places. IT executives don't really read ACM,
But, if you get the ideas in front of the C-Suite folks and it
resonates, then they push it down the lines in their organization where,
one hopes, those who should pay attention will pay attention. Awareness,
I would think, is what matters.
My $0.02 for the week.
Bernie
Ber
Thanks gunnar. That was a gratifying article that I am proud of.
We've garnered good coverage as a field in CIO magazine too. I don't think
it's as simple as having ink in the right locations, but I do agree with james
that that helps. Software security is continuing to spread and grow, and w