Re^2: GNU, security, and RMS
Dick Dunn
rcd at ico.ISC.COM
Thu Jun 8 08:04:00 AEST 1989
In article <13783 at ut-emx.UUCP>, clyde at ut-emx.UUCP (Clyde W. Hoover) writes:
> It is always easier (from a techincal viewpoint) to start restrictive
> and loosen up...
Sure, but distributing the system in very restrictive form has a social
effect--namely that some folks will look at it and say, "Gosh, they send it
out with the lid clamped down tight; that must be the way it *should* be
done." From a social-interaction viewpoint, it's much harder to loosen it
up. You can tighten things if you get into problems (although there's a
certain closing-the-barn-door... effect there).
I guess I've been conditioned, but UNIX default permissions have made sense
to me for a long time--files tend to get created as globally readable but
only locally writable.
[Disclaimer: I am thankfully not a sociologist, so observations of social
effects are based on unsubstantiated common experience.]
--
Dick Dunn UUCP: {ncar,nbires}!ico!rcd (303)449-2870
...Lately it occurs to me what a long, strange trip it's been.
More information about the Comp.unix.wizards
mailing list