Le 27 juil. 06 à 07:08, Ian Hickson a écrit :
On Wed, 26 Jul 2006 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

What is hostile content?

Content that attempts to subvert the implementation.

Then say it. I think it will help.

Quite literally,
hostile content.

I'm very careful with what people consider obvious. The W3C specifications are full of obvious statement. There are more than one meaning to words.

From WordNet (r) 2.0 :

  hostile
adj 1: characterized by enmity or ill will; "a hostile nation"; "a
              hostile remark"; "hostile actions" [ant: amicable]
       2: not belonging to your own country's forces or those of an
          ally; "hostile naval and air forces" [ant: friendly]
       3: very unfriendly; "a hostile attitude"
       4: impossible to bring into friendly accord; "hostile factions"
       5: very unfavorable to life or growth; "a hostile climate"; "an
          uncongenial atmosphere"; "an uncongenial soil"; "the
          unfriendly environment at high altitudes" [syn: uncongenial,
           unfriendly]
       6: marked by features that oppose constructive treatment or
          development; "not able to accomplish much in such a
          hostile environment"
       7: used of attempts to buy or take control of a business;
          "hostile takeover"; "hostile tender offer"

Hoping that my comment was not taken as an hostile(6) comment. ;)

How do you test the "remain stable" assertion?

Spot checking, mostly, though this is an area that has a number of domain
experts and, indeed, a community dedicated to finding such issues.

Note that we were more than happy to see a security section.

Thanks for your clarification Ian.

--
Karl Dubost - http://www.w3.org/People/karl/
W3C Conformance Manager, QA Activity Lead
  QA Weblog - http://www.w3.org/QA/
     *** Be Strict To Be Cool ***



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