• @blackstratA
      link
      136 days ago

      Not on it’s own. But as part of a multi layered approach of does help.

      • @Poik@pawb.social
        link
        fedilink
        25 days ago

        As someone who has professionally done legal reverse engineering. No. No it isn’t.

        The security you get through vetting your code is invaluable. Closing off things makes it more likely for things to not be caught by good actors, and thus not fixed and taken advantage of by bad actors.

        And obscurity does nothing to stop bad actors, if there’s money to be had. It will temporarily stop script kiddies though. Until the exploit finds it’s easy into their suite of exploits that no one’s fixed yet.