On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 9:13 PM, Shawn Wilsher <sdwi...@mozilla.com> wrote:
> On 4/13/2010 8:53 AM, João Eiras wrote: > >> Not really. The user agent can ask for quota from the user when the limit >> is being hit without the webpage even having to worry about it. Opera 10.50 >> does that. >> > I agree with this, and do see the benefit of adding more to the spec. > Sure. That addresses item 1 of Mark's original question, but what about this: On Tue, Apr 13, 2010 at 3:09 AM, Mark Seaborn <mseab...@chromium.org> wrote: > 2) It is too permissive because it enforces no limit on the amount of > space a web app can use: A web app from example.com can create an > unlimited number of puppet subdomains: aaa.example.com, bbb.example.com, > etc. It can use aaa.example.com's 5Mb allocation by loading a script > from aaa.example.com in an iframe and communicating with it using > postMessage(). > As far as I'm aware, no one (including Chromium) has a solution to at the moment. Which probably should be a cause for concern. :-)