Django is known for and designed to be *flexible.* If you don't like  
how a certain stack is made, make it better.

It's one of Django's core philosophies.

Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 24, 2008, at 9:28, Will <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> Michael,
>
>>> In terms of security, perhaps this is the most critical part of the
>>> stack? SQL injection is one of the nastiest security vulnerabilities
>>> IMHO.
>>
>> You don't have time to write 2-3 bad SQL queries and attempt
>> injection?  We're talking 5 lines of python, and that includes import
>> statements.
>
> Is that substitute for a full suite of regression tests?  What about
> buffer overflow attacks? There's probably loads of other attacks I
> don't even know about.
> It doesn't even sound as if psycopg gets tested before release.
>
>>> I love open source software, and I'm not asking for huge teams
>>> supporting the code. It's just psycopg is the most disorganised
>>> production open source project I've ever seen.
>>
>> then you haven't seen a lot of open source?  idk what to tell you...
>
> All I'm asking for is some reason to trust the integrity of psycopg,
> and all I'm getting from you is sarcasm. Perhaps you could provide me
> with some links?
>
>
> Cheers,
>
> Will
> >

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