>>23
Tools like that already exist in one form or another, but they have a price tag and they suck. It would be a hacker's delight, and most companies will be too cheap to go back and fix everything it finds, so you are right. But still. Maybe the average neet exploit finder living in a basement doesn't have a tool like this, but you can bet your ass that the professionals do. By keeping it secret, you enable the ones with more resources to find exploits in software written by developers that don't have as powerful tools. So you aren't preventing hacking by releasing it, but enabling those that already have the capacity to continue to have an edge over the maintainers.