On Sat, Oct 29, 2005 at 04:10:19AM +0200, Yoshinori K. Okuji wrote: > On Friday 28 October 2005 07:10 pm, Jonathan Shapiro wrote: > > It is a curious thing that people simultaneously want safety from the admin > > and help from them. Sometimes you have to pick one or the other. > > You are right. Fortunately or unfortunately, this is the truth. So I > repeatedly claim that balancing is the key point in making decisions.
Still, telling people "I am the owner of this computer, you can use it, and I am not technically able to spy on you or change your things, except if you give me your password" should be understandable for "normal" people. When they know this, they will also know that asking the the owner to change their data without remembering their password will result in a negative response. They may not like that, but I think they consider it a good idea to be protected from the sysadmin. And if they don't, nothing stops them from installing a back door for him. That is, this can be realised on a per-user basis. That sounds like a good idea to me. :-) Thanks, Bas -- I encourage people to send encrypted e-mail (see http://www.gnupg.org). If you have problems reading my e-mail, use a better reader. Please send the central message of e-mails as plain text in the message body, not as HTML and definitely not as MS Word. Please do not use the MS Word format for attachments either. For more information, see http://129.125.47.90/e-mail.html
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature
_______________________________________________ L4-hurd mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/l4-hurd
