Secure Coding mailing list archives

But what proof do we have that any of it makes a difference?


From: peter.amey at praxis-his.com (Peter Amey)
Date: Tue, 26 Jun 2007 12:56:45 +0100

 

-----Original Message-----
From: sc-l-bounces at securecoding.org 
[mailto:sc-l-bounces at securecoding.org] On Behalf Of Goertzel, Karen
Sent: 25 June 2007 19:49
To: Secure Coding
Subject: [SC-L] But what proof do we have that any of it 
makes a difference?

There are two closely-related questions that keep arising for 
which I still can find no satisfying answer (for me 
"satisfying" means "supported by concrete evidence"):

[1] Will using a secure SDLC methodology (or a set of secure 
development "best practices") actually produce software that 
will, when deployed "in the wild" resist or tolerate attacks 
and attempted executions of inserted/embedded malicious code 
better than software whose developers did not use a secure 
SDLC methodology?

[2] Will software that adheres to a set of "security 
principles", when deployed "in the wild", actually resist or 
tolerate attacks and attempted execution of inserted/embedded 
malicious code better than software whose developers did not 
adhere to security principles?


You might find some useful evidence here: 

http://www.praxis-his.com/pdfs/issse2006tokeneer.pdf

The NSA were cetainly impressed with benefits of a rigorous engineering
approach to software development.

Peter

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Peter Amey BSc ACGI CEng CITP MRAes FBCS


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