Slaying Gould dragon with a wooden horse

Steve Summit stevesu at copper.UUCP
Sun Nov 2 14:44:21 AEST 1986


In article <161 at unisec.UUCP>, dpw at unisec.UUCP (Darryl Wagoner) writes:
> 
> The question I have for the net is: Is using a trojan horse a legit way
> to break into a system?  What is your opinion?

You know those stupid logic problems where you're on an island,
and some of the natives always tell the truth, while some of them
always lie, but you can't tell them apart, and you're supposed to
ask an unknown native one question which will let you determine
which of two paths leads to some village?  Calling a trojan horse
an "illegitimate" way of breaking into a system is like getting
mad at a crafty native for giving you some kind of distruthfully
honest answer which causes you to walk down the wrong path.

What would Gould have considered a "legitimate" way of breaking
in?  What does a "legitimate way of breaking in" even mean?

                                         Steve Summit
                                         tektronix!copper!stevesu



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