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Full Discussion: is open source more secure ?
Special Forums Cybersecurity is open source more secure ? Post 302334369 by Koryo on Wednesday 15th of July 2009 10:56:41 AM
Old 07-15-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by bakunin

To appraise your security status simply put yourself into the place of the intruder: will it possibly pay off to overcome your defenses? Act, if the answer is "yes" or near there, otherwise don't bother.

The same is true for security: what you protect and the efforts for protecting it have to be in proportion and the question is not "safe" but "safe enough".

bakunin
I would have to dis-agree with this point of yours. If you make security relative to the sensitivity of information, you are basically saying to someone that wants sensitive information that this system is holding very sensitive information, and this is not, due to your system security change.

If you suddenly upgrade your security systems and i know you use the methodology above, then you have just made users aware that you now have something sensitive that you do not want others to get. On the other hand however, if you ALWAYS have as-secure a system as possible, no matter what is on there, you don't suddenly "change habits" and make it obvious you are trying to hide something, other then everything.
 

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CLOSE(7)						  PostgreSQL 9.2.7 Documentation						  CLOSE(7)

NAME
CLOSE - close a cursor SYNOPSIS
CLOSE { name | ALL } DESCRIPTION
CLOSE frees the resources associated with an open cursor. After the cursor is closed, no subsequent operations are allowed on it. A cursor should be closed when it is no longer needed. Every non-holdable open cursor is implicitly closed when a transaction is terminated by COMMIT or ROLLBACK. A holdable cursor is implicitly closed if the transaction that created it aborts via ROLLBACK. If the creating transaction successfully commits, the holdable cursor remains open until an explicit CLOSE is executed, or the client disconnects. PARAMETERS
name The name of an open cursor to close. ALL Close all open cursors. NOTES
PostgreSQL does not have an explicit OPEN cursor statement; a cursor is considered open when it is declared. Use the DECLARE(7) statement to declare a cursor. You can see all available cursors by querying the pg_cursors system view. If a cursor is closed after a savepoint which is later rolled back, the CLOSE is not rolled back; that is, the cursor remains closed. EXAMPLES
Close the cursor liahona: CLOSE liahona; COMPATIBILITY
CLOSE is fully conforming with the SQL standard. CLOSE ALL is a PostgreSQL extension. SEE ALSO
DECLARE(7), FETCH(7), MOVE(7) PostgreSQL 9.2.7 2014-02-17 CLOSE(7)
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