On 18 Mar 2015 12:59 pm, "Christopher Browne" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Instead, I'll step back to Thompson's paper... > > "The moral is obvious. You can't trust code that you did not totally > create yourself." This whole conversation/hissy-fit is missing yet another problem. Even Ken Thompson wrote code with bugs and constructed code vulnerable to exploitation. I certainly don't blindly trust the code I write - I make the confident assumption that it is buggy and possibly dangerous. If anyone on Earth wrote a program that actually addressed my needs I wouldn't be writing the code at all. Trusting something so complicated it requires a computer to interpret and run it is a challenge. Many approaches are being explored, differences of opinion are being generated constantly. That's OK. There are a lot of things that are now standard that are based on history rather than good theoretical bases. Let's look at working solutions, ask questions and try to be friendly and a little more understanding. There is no right way, and priorities differ.
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