On Wed, May 02, 2007 at 10:48:12AM +0100, Martin Guy wrote: > We can just follow adobe's algorithm for a first hack - at least that > will solve the problems that the community has alerted them to.
This is ok to me as far as we allow the user to remove such a "limitation" from the client. Adobe's algorithm is based on a security-trough-proprietery-software model, which is it works as far as nobody can change the client code... In many cases the crossdomain policy is just a stupid limitation. An example: many sites publish geographical informations in XML format and you DO can access those informations with a normal browser. When it comes to a flash player, you can NOT load those resources anymore unless the publishers properly provide a crossdomain.xml file in their web server. I think this is just a fascist behaviour of the MM/Adobe player which we do NOT want to replicate, except if we want to provide it as a facility to verify a movie will play with the proprietary player too.. --strk; _______________________________________________ Gnash-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnash-dev

