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posted by takyon on Thursday August 13 2015, @02:46AM   Printer-friendly

Oracle's Chief Security Officer, Mary Ann Davidson, took to her blog to demand that users stop hunting for bugs in Oracle's software, because, among other things, it violates the user license.

The blog entry got deleted quickly, but is archived here:

Now is a good time to reiterate that I'm not beating people up over this merely because of the license agreement. More like, "I do not need you to analyze the code since we already do that, it's our job to do that, we are pretty good at it, we can – unlike a third party or a tool – actually analyze the code to determine what's happening and at any rate most of these tools have a close to 100% false positive rate so please do not waste our time on reporting little green men in our code." I am not running away from our responsibilities to customers, merely trying to avoid a painful, annoying, and mutually-time wasting exercise.

Please, Oracle users, don't worry your little heads - just stop violating the license agreement.

takyon: #oraclefanfic on Twitter

And an update from Ars:

Oracle Executive Vice President and Chief Corporate Architect Edward Screven made a statement distributed by e-mail to the press on the post:

The security of our products and services has always been critically important to Oracle. Oracle has a robust program of product security assurance and works with third party researchers and customers to jointly ensure that applications built with Oracle technology are secure. We removed the post as it does not reflect our beliefs or our relationship with our customers.

Just how Oracle's chief security officer fell out of alignment with Oracle's core beliefs and managed to spread her heretic thoughts on customers was not addressed.


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  • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Friday August 14 2015, @01:47AM

    by Grishnakh (2831) on Friday August 14 2015, @01:47AM (#222622)

    The "security experts" I've seen are just there to fill a seat and look like the organization is doing its "due diligence". They don't know the first thing about coding, why software has vulnerabilities, all they know is some buzzwords they learned at some conference, and they spend their time making powerpoint slides and running around acting like they know what they're doing.

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