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On 7 November 2015 at 12:46, Costello, Roger L. <costello@m...> wrote: > Hi Folks, > > A colleague and I created a graphic which illustrates the risk of unconstrained strings: > > http://www.xfront.com/Illustrating-the-Risk-of-Unconstrained-Strings.pdf > > /Roger > > __ Sadly like many graphics purporting to illustrate some mathematical data, it doesn't illustrate anything. There is no definition of the values used, and no units on the diagram, so it is just a quarter circle randomly coloured with no information content. The first sentence isn't clearly true (the terms are undefined so it is hard to be sure). But the way to prevent a string containing malicious content is to control write access to it. If I have a string of length 1 constrained to be "0" or "1" that is somewhere in the green section of your picture, I assume. But if it is 1=nuclear destruction 0=do nothing, then it has a 50% chance of having malicious content if there are no controls over what is writing to it. If 50% is green what percentages do red represent? David
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