Many programs read an initialization file to allow their defaults to be configured. You must ensure that an attacker can't change which initialization file is used, nor create or modify that file. Often you should not use the current directory as a source of this information, since if the program is used as an editor or browser, the user may be viewing the directory controlled by someone else. Instead, if the program is a typical user application, you should load any user defaults from a hidden file or directory contained in the user's home directory. If the program is setuid/setgid, don't read any file controlled by the user unless you carefully filter it as an untrusted (potentially hostile) input. Trusted configuration values should be loaded from somewhere else entirely (typically from a file in /etc).