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| Subject: | RE: Security training of developers and company liability |
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| Date: | Mon, 12 Dec 2005 11:06:00 -0600 |
For anyone still interested: I posed this question to our corporate legal team. Their response stated that since we have a corporate information systems use policy that includes not using the Internet for inappropriate reasons (there is much more language in the policy of course), we would have a good argument that we were not negligent by training developers in this respect. Therefore, he didn't feel a CYA signed waiver or disclaimer was necessary. They did suggest reaffirming the relevant parts of the information systems use policy verbally at the start of the class however. Note that we are in Wisconsin, USA. Laws in your respective country, state/province, city/town/district, whatever, may be and probably are different. James Strassburg -----Original Message----- From: James Strassburg [mailto:JStrassburg@directs.com] Sent: Wednesday, December 07, 2005 10:51 AM To: webappsec@securityfocus.com Subject: Security training of developers and company liability I am currently training all of my organization's software developers on web application security. I'm using WebScarab and WebGoat as my primary teaching tools as I feel that seeing how the problems are exploited is much more effective than trying to cover every type of coding mistake that can lead to the problems. My question is about company liability. What if one of the developers used the information learned to attack another site? Is my company liable for their actions as we taught them how to do it? Should I have our legal department create a disclaimer or waiver for them to sign? I will be asking the same questions directly to our legal department but thought a discussion here could provide some more insight and be valuable for others. thanks. James A. Strassburg Jr. Software Security Architect Direct Supply, Inc.
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