>>5
Not really. It shows you don't know what you're talking about because you said there's two people max involved. Actually that is not true. There's countless ezines and other files with information that verify otherwise.
I don't know about this 'anti-sec movement'. I haven't heard this term before. But I think, in general, we're about to speak about all those people who might have discovered an exploit and use it to access private data or do other naughty things. The logic here is simple, they weren't even referring to open-source software, though that got hacked too. Mainly, it was other 'security-specialists' or some other impressive job name for pretty much "underground sellout" or "cs101 undergraduate". Whenever the fuck these guys are from, they realized there's money in patching software or simply reporting bugs, and they hanged around usenet and IRC trying to get themselves involved with more skilled people than themselves, and finally, steal their exploits, known bugs, et al, only to sell them to a corporation or company that doesn't know shit about programming, to profit. They themselves don't know programming. Guess what, even the fuckers that wrote the code for the program that was exploited probably didn't know programming. It was either that, or pressure (such as deadlines et cetera).
What's the point here? One person writes shit code and gets paid, the other reports bugs he didn't write and gets paid, and the only person who is doing something about security, gets shit. Even worse, those who get paid, get shit compared to some high-place employee who simply orders the patch-fixes under the bug reports and behind the desk under the camera... there's a gun, a nine. Don't hesitate, time is money, money is human-made, time is human-experienced. The blood on your first daughter from your dead wifes amniotic sac. Broken condom and a used syringe in your trash. In your deathbed, waiting, you realize the irony. It shows, /prog/ on the wall, in a direction you haven't looked before. Oh, how you'd wish you had done this earlier... looking at a different direction.