On 7/5/06, Ka-Ping Yee <python-dev at zesty.ca> wrote: > > On Wed, 5 Jul 2006, Brett Cannon wrote: > > On 7/4/06, Ka-Ping Yee <python-dev at zesty.ca> wrote: > > > In response to Guido's comment about confusing the words "trusted" and > > > "untrusted", how about "empowered" and "restricted"? > > > > Maybe. I am really starting to lean towards trusted and sandboxed. > > It can be risky to use words of the form '*trust*' when talking > about security because 'trust' can have different meanings in > different contexts. (Examples: 'X is trusted' might mean 'X is > something i feel safe running without restrictions' or 'X *is* > in fact allowed to run without restrictions' or 'i need to run X > without restrictions in order to accomplish my task' or 'X is > something i am relying on for the security of my system'.) > > The most common context for 'trusted' that i seem to come across > is in the phrase 'trusted computing base' (TCB), which refers to > 'the thing that is supposed to be enforcing security restrictions' > as opposed to 'something i'm willing to let run unrestricted'. > So when i read 'trusted code' what comes to mind is the C implementation > of the Python interpreter, and it may be a good idea to reserve that > phrase for that purpose, if it's to be used at all. > > In any case, let's try to nail down clear names for the different > pieces we're talking about here, and i gently advise avoiding > '*trust*' words or using them with very limited meaning. For the next draft I am going with "trusted" and "sandboxed" just because I have already revised a decent amount and it is what my brain is defaulting to right now, but I can change the wording later. -Brett -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/attachments/20060706/fa853fe3/attachment.html
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