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> they also don't understand webdevelopment in general, especially the http protocol. I find that somewhat strange, because they also can't do native application

Why would that be strange? Someone who is bad at thing A is likely also bab at closely related thing B.

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Okay, but these are developers that can't do frontend, can't do backend, can't do native, can't do embedded, or at least none of them very well.... so what kind of developer are they really, other than a bad one?
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The amount of time the average webdev spends actually consciously dealing with the intricacies of the http protocol is just very small.
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> I assume correctly, at least the application now works.

That's like saying the lock works because people can enter the building. What about keeping the bad guys out, which is the whole point?

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> That's like saying the lock works because people can enter the building. What about keeping the bad guys out, which is the whole point?

You can keep all the "bad guys" out by putting a brick wall in place of every entrance and window. That will achieve 100% of the security goal, and even ops people might breathe a sigh of relief - until the stakeholders who commissioned the buildings get wind of it, that is.

Beyond that, locks aren't about "keeping bad guys out", but about giving owners a degree of control over who can access what and when. "Keeping bad guys out" is a subset of it, possibly a small one, unless you're happy defining "bad guys" as "people whose goals are at odds with the owner's business model".

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