[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] RE: The Rule of Least Power - does it miss the point?
True for the global network. False for particular information flowing at particular times in particular contexts. Hence, the concept of legitimacy. You really do want to have the ability to control the indexability of your Social Security Number. I recently had my identity stolen. Because I don't know how that happened, I can only undo the damage. But the lesson is that unconstrainable use of a global identifier in a system that is quick to grant privileges and slow to revoke them is a bad thing. SSNs worked in the days when getting a phone or a credit privilege took effort and mostly human reviews. Today it is fast but the checking is gutted and the time to detection is slow. If one makes a rule that data should be maximally indexable without respect to context and legitimacy, one builds exactly the kind of dangerous system we have today in the World Wide Web: witless (not dumb, just witless). Being able to spoof an Emergency Management System using callerID is a bad thing. Another way to think about this: if data is marked correctly with regards as to operations that can be performed on it, then the object can acquire rights from the governing environment or have them revoked. The reason for a Pragmatic Layer is to make the system aware of concepts such as legitimacy which are situation or context rights over data. But the idea that information should be coded for maximum indexability proves to be witless. BTW: This thread and the thread Jeliffe is chatting regards schemas are overlapping. It may be the case that pure XML message instancing is flawed (no rules). NOTE: Given humans that record your SSN on purchase, and that they are often low paid are subject to temptations to harvest and resell (same problem as payola and the under paid program director for radio stations), the time has come to do away with SSNs as unique IDs for other transactions. len From: Gavin Thomas Nicol [mailto:gtn@r...] > Information is transported subjective;y (least > power, least authority) and objectified for > local processing. That's the key point, but this has always been so whenever information is exchanged. My guess is that the authors are simply saying that wherever possible, encode data in a form that is amenable to automated analysis and transformation. That's common sense IMHO.
|
PURCHASE STYLUS STUDIO ONLINE TODAY!Purchasing Stylus Studio from our online shop is Easy, Secure and Value Priced! Download The World's Best XML IDE!Accelerate XML development with our award-winning XML IDE - Download a free trial today! Subscribe in XML format
|