Nevertheless, when you have the binary, you stand a chance at reverse engineering. If you broadcast such a binary, you have a guaranteed leak. At least, when you don’t publish at all, you stand a chance at actual secrecy. (Pretty unlikely, though, if too much people are involved.)
In software development, secrecy is often undesirable: nobody trusts you; nobody will work with you; nobody can help you—you are pretty screwed. Thus, all the OSS in the world’s infrastructure these days.
Nevertheless, when you have the binary, you stand a chance at reverse engineering. If you broadcast such a binary, you have a guaranteed leak. At least, when you don’t publish at all, you stand a chance at actual secrecy. (Pretty unlikely, though, if too much people are involved.)
In software development, secrecy is often undesirable: nobody trusts you; nobody will work with you; nobody can help you—you are pretty screwed. Thus, all the OSS in the world’s infrastructure these days.