Anyone who has been working with computers for a long time will have noticed that mainstream
operating systems and applications have become easier to use over the years. Tasks that use to be complex proceduresPicture Of PadLock On Chain and required experienced professional to do can now be done at the push of a button.
For instance, setting up an Active Directory domain in Windows 2000 or higher can now be done by a wizard leading even the most novice technical person to believe they can "securely" setup the operating environment. This is actually quite far from the truth. Half the time this procedure fails because DNS does not configure properly or security permissions are relaxed because the end user cannot perform a specific function.
If It’s Easy To Develop, Is It Also Secure
One of the reasons why operating systems and applications "appear" to be easier to work with then they use to is developers have created procedures and reusable objects to take care of all the complex tasks for you. For instance, back in the old days when I started as a developer using assembly language and c/c++, I had to write pretty much all the code myself. Now everything is visually driven, with millions of lines of code already written for you. All you have to do is create the framework for your application and the development environment and compiler adds all the other complex stuff for you. Who wrote this other code? How can you be sure it is secure. Basically, you have no idea and there is no easy way to answer this question. Can Easy To Use Software Also Be Secure - IT Observer
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