Top 14 Quotes & Sayings by Theo de Raadt

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a South African scientist Theo de Raadt.
Last updated on November 20, 2024.
Theo de Raadt

Theo de Raadt is a South African-born software engineer who lives in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. He is the founder and leader of the OpenBSD and OpenSSH projects and was also a founding member of NetBSD. In 2004, De Raadt won the Free Software Award for his work on OpenBSD and OpenSSH.

I started working on OpenBSD, and many earlier projects, because I have always felt that vendor systems were not designed for quality.
The primary goal of a vendor is to make money.
Linux people do what they do because they hate Microsoft. — © Theo de Raadt
Linux people do what they do because they hate Microsoft.
Linux has never been about quality. There are so many parts of the system that are just these cheap little hacks, and it happens to run.
In some industry markets, high quality can be tied to making more money, but I am sure by now all of us know the computer industry is not like that.
I work on OpenBSD fulltime, as the project leader. I set some directions, increase communication between the developers, and try to be involved in nearly every aspect of the base system.
I don't know if there's enough vision. Industry wide, the apathy regarding this recent problem is already setting in - shiny things are happening elsewhere, people are forgetting.
I think it is astounding that people could argue for "you just must trust someone else to fix it" instead of "you could fix it yourself, or hire someone to fix it." There is a contractor base out there that can solve these problems as well as or better than the major vendors could. But I think the major vendors are still having more luck at getting the ear of the press.
What's so exciting is to be able to just take something and polish it so much that hopefully in the future people will start borrowing things from it.
[...] beer results in ideas, which results in new code.
I actually am fairly uncomfortable about it, even if our firm stipulation was that they cannot tell us what to do. We are simply doing what we do anyways - securing software - and they have no say in the matter. I try to convince myself that our grant means a half of a cruise missile doesn't get built.
C++ is a pile of crap.
Only failure makes us experts.
So the HP guy comes up to me (at the Melbourne conference) and he says, 'If you say nasty things like that to vendors you're not going to get anything'. I said, 'No, in eight years of saying nothing, we've got nothing, and I'm going to start saying nasty things, in the hope that some of these vendors will start giving me money so I'll shut up'.
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