It absolutely is! Locking can be implicit -- the assumption should be that the user wants things secure.
But imagine working for a company that is very excited about their AI firewall, that intelligently OPENS ports based on a machine learning algorithm.
"No! That's a terrible idea!" You exclaim, pulling out tufts of hair. "That has more security holes than a slice of swiss cheese!"
"Yeah, but all our focus groups really liked the feature, and when customers hear AI and algorithms they're more likely to buy... Come on, you'd have to basically have a PhD to exploit an algorithm...."
But imagine working for a company that is very excited about their AI firewall, that intelligently OPENS ports based on a machine learning algorithm.
"No! That's a terrible idea!" You exclaim, pulling out tufts of hair. "That has more security holes than a slice of swiss cheese!"
"Yeah, but all our focus groups really liked the feature, and when customers hear AI and algorithms they're more likely to buy... Come on, you'd have to basically have a PhD to exploit an algorithm...."