[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] RE: IEEE Computer: "XML Raises Concerns" (Was Re: XM
**************************************************************** IMPORTANT The information transmitted is for the use of the intended recipient only and may contain confidential and/or legally privileged material. Any review, re-transmission, disclosure dissemination or other use of, or taking of any action in reliance upon, this information by persons or entities other than the intended recipient is prohibited and may result in severe penalties. If you have received this e-mail in error please notify the Privacy Hotline of the Australian Taxation Office, telephone 13 28 69 and delete all copies of this transmission together with any attachments. **************************************************************** Were is the worry? Trade-offs, bang-for-buck and profit-loss will all result in XML staying as it is a healthy solution for a lot of problems. It is not design to solve every problem in the world but why bag it when it does some really cool things. 1. Infrastructure. Processor and storage products far outstretch the needs of XML. It is correct to say the XML has more information than HTML, but isnt that really the benefit and also trade off that your looking for. 2. Security Concerns. If a file exists in HTML, Word, Excel, PDF or any other office type product is it any less secure? Unless the article was talking about system transaction, like in SOAP, I don't see the difference from what has been happening for the last ten to fifteen years. 3. XHTML. If the developer chooses to migrate straight to a pure XML solution then I don't understand that problem. You develop you schema/DTD, develop you migration system complete with error calculation and migrate your data into a markup container language. Presumably you have also established infrastructure for editing your new system and producing content from it. Or should we alternately just do a Save As from Word to HTML and throw it up onto the Internet. Warwick Foster Australian Taxation Office RMS Operations (03) 92752960 -----Original Message----- From: Mitch Amiano [mailto:mamiano@n...] Sent: Wednesday, 7 May 2003 12:58 Cc: xml-dev@l... Subject: IEEE Computer: "XML Raises Concerns" (Was Re: XML [expletive deleted]) I'll raise the recent piece by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols, "XML Raises Concerns as it Gains Prominence," in the May issue of IEEE Computer mag as a less well considered criticism of XML. The article says XML raises several key concerns, among them: 1) because they provide considerable information about a document's content, xml files include much more data than HTML files. This is a burden to a company's network, processor and storage infrastructures. 2) extensively describing a document's contents and appearing in plain text creates security concerns. 3) many developers may not be cooperating with the effort to transition to XML via XHTML. Proposed solutions 1) buy a centralized $35k + appliance to translate between XML and binary formats 2) use and XML firewall to inspect each packet, deploy extensive directory services, and use secure sockets. 3) none suggested. "This transition would force [developers] to learn a new set of skills and require them to rewrite their older code..." Contrasted to the Hunt and Thomas article, articles like this make me worry. ----------------------------------------------------------------- The xml-dev list is sponsored by XML.org <http://www.xml.org>, an initiative of OASIS <http://www.oasis-open.org> The list archives are at http://lists.xml.org/archives/xml-dev/ To subscribe or unsubscribe from this list use the subscription manager: <http://lists.xml.org/ob/adm.pl>
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