ParabolicTet
Mechanical
- Apr 19, 2004
- 69
In my opinion, company's spend too much time trying to make simulation data secure. I never understood why. If someone is smart enough to reverse engineer simulation data, then they can just do the simulation themselves!
I think a lot of engineers have inflated egos and think their simulations are some top-secret thing. They think a competitor would make millions if they got their hands on them. In reality, the simulations probably won't make any sense to anyone but the analyst who built them.
Also nowadays there is a strong open-source/community approach to software. Most of these top-secret simulations likely made extensive use of open source software ( Linux, open-source code, etc ). So why feel the urge to spend loads of resources trying to protect that data?
I am curious what others think. If I were CEO of a large company I would just make all engineering simulation "open-source"!
I think a lot of engineers have inflated egos and think their simulations are some top-secret thing. They think a competitor would make millions if they got their hands on them. In reality, the simulations probably won't make any sense to anyone but the analyst who built them.
Also nowadays there is a strong open-source/community approach to software. Most of these top-secret simulations likely made extensive use of open source software ( Linux, open-source code, etc ). So why feel the urge to spend loads of resources trying to protect that data?
I am curious what others think. If I were CEO of a large company I would just make all engineering simulation "open-source"!