12-04-2019, 01:29 PM
To a certain extent I do agree with @humanpuff69, regarding dynamic websites bring a little more prone to hackers than static ones. However, I'd like to mention one thing in this regard - that it depends to a huge extent on how you've made the website. In some cases, dynamic ones can be made more secure, and this is totally up to the creator of the website.
Yeah, SQL Injection and such sort of things tend to affect dynamic websites, especially when unencrypted databases are there. For even encrypted ones, that's brute force which plays the important role. Take for example, CMSes. At most you could mess around with the admin pages, hide them, change the access URL, use thousands of plugins, but you can't completely secure it. Some loopholes do exist whatever measure you take, and that's why hackers exist even today, with so high-tech security being developed nowadays.
In short, nothing is 100% secure, however, safety measures and precautions can be taken but that's solely up to the discretion of the maker.
Regards,
Yeah, SQL Injection and such sort of things tend to affect dynamic websites, especially when unencrypted databases are there. For even encrypted ones, that's brute force which plays the important role. Take for example, CMSes. At most you could mess around with the admin pages, hide them, change the access URL, use thousands of plugins, but you can't completely secure it. Some loopholes do exist whatever measure you take, and that's why hackers exist even today, with so high-tech security being developed nowadays.
In short, nothing is 100% secure, however, safety measures and precautions can be taken but that's solely up to the discretion of the maker.
Regards,