So under HA, a Web browser can only show ASCII text files. After all, HTML
itself is a programming language with intermingled code (ie., HTML tags) and
data ("text").
Richard
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Rob, grandpa of Ryan, Trevor, Devon & Hannah
Sent: Thursday, July 17, 2008 6:30 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [funsec] Texas Bank Dumps Antivirus for Whitelisting
Date sent: Thu, 17 Jul 2008 14:02:52 -0400
From: "Richard M. Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> But how does a Web browser running on a Harvard Architecture stop XSS
> errors? Code and data mixing happens within HTML and not at the binary
> machine level. You're now saying that we should ditch HTML with its
mixture of
> tags, text, and script code are you?
Boy, you really *don't* know anything about computer architecture, do you?
Interpreting HTML on a Harvard architecture machine might be interesting,
but,
in any case, there would not be any mixing of code and data. Therefore, Web
browsing under Harvard architecture would not involve any active content, at
least
not any that would be executed on the client (browser) machine.
====================== (quote inserted randomly by Pegasus Mailer)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
(sqrt(-1)) before (2.71828), except after (186,242 miles/sec)
http://victoria.tc.ca/techrev/rms.htm
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