the application runs with the privileges of the web server. If that is root, you have a problem.
No, you have two problems - the first of which is solved by firing your system administrator.
Red Hat locked apache down by changing to some "nobody/nogroup"
No, apache has done that from (very nearly if not) the start. Various distributions will change the username and/or group, but the net effect is that apache needs to be launched as root to bind to a privileged port (< 1024) and then drops privileges to as unprivileged a user as possible.
s**lil*; $*=join'',sort split q**; s;.*;grr; &&s+(.(.)).+$2$1+; $; = qq-$_-;s,.*,ahc,;$,.=chop for split q,,,reverse;print for($,,$;,$*,$/)
In reply to Re^2: How to answer "Perl is not secure" objections?
by chargrill
in thread How to answer "Perl is not secure" objections?
by radiantmatrix
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