Hello,

On Thu, Aug 29, 2002 at 12:54:18PM +0800, John Summerfield wrote:
> On Wed, 28 Aug 2002 20:25, Sergio A. Kessler wrote:
> > the perl is _not_ on your machine, it's only in the server,
> > and you can't change it unless you are the administrator.
> I control the server and the server _produces_ the js. If you trust the perl 
> code, why do you not trust the js it produces?

in general, allowing JS is a per-client setting that you don't
control from the server. So if the client has to use different
sites and need to trust only your server, he has to go to his
preference settings and turn JS on and off all the time, depending
on the next link he's going to visit (knowingly?). Net result:
JS is only near feasible in an Intranet where you control the
client platforms and the JS injected into the network from
A-Z, and that's probably not the most common situation to begin
with.


Best,
--Toni++



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