Benjamin Renaud br@doppio.eng.sun.com writes:
Policies are statements like:
"code endorsed by any one of the following signatures (say three of my friends) can access the public part of my file system"
This is hard. It's probably not going to make it in the first release. The simple first pass is to say "code signed by x, y, and z" can do whatever it wants.
Good thing Sun is spending millions pushing a brand-new language down our throats so we can do nothing we couldn't already do. After all the hype about security, security models, and sandboxes we get signed applets that can do anything. What a let-down. Currently, the only safe way to run untrusted Java code is to not run it. This probably isn't going to change (see cpunks archives for reasons). If Sun cannot prevent untrusted code from doing nasty things, how can they prevent code empowered with certain capabilities from doing things they are not certified to do? It now seems that all the effort, time, and money to move towards Java over another OO language was a waste in a way since it no longer appears to have any security advantages. Ignoring security, Java is not a bad language at all, but it still has distinct disadvantages over some of the possible alternatives (mainly immaturity, no dynamic message invocation, interpreters still not ready for prime-time). I wonder if Borland realizes that instead of putting so much time, effort, and money into someone else's product, Java, they could have just implemented signed Delphi code and gotten basically the same thing. I guess they didn't think of it in time. You have to hand it to Sun/JavaSoft's marketing team, though. While others have tried, few have been so successful at creating an "industry standard" from nothing. Indeed, the only reason left to use Java is "because everyone else is into it..." andrew