T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
414.1 | Similar sign-on announcement | TLE::SAVAGE | Neil, @Spit Brook | Fri Sep 25 1987 13:41 | 6 |
| This is what users of the CLT cluster at ZK see when logging in:
Unauthorized Access is Prohibited
Username:
|
414.2 | Cross over the bridge | COMET::LAFOREST | | Fri Sep 25 1987 16:56 | 9 |
| How about the idiotic road signs that say '$100 fine for litering'?
I guess if I had $100 bills to liter with, it certainly would be
fine with a lot of people.
I also saw a sign near a drawbridge once that warned 'Do not
cross when open'. How stupid do they think people are? Maybe I
shouldn't ask!
Ray
|
414.3 | Having it both ways | RUTLND::SATOW | | Fri Sep 25 1987 17:18 | 8 |
| re: .0
> UNAUTHORIZED ACCESS TO THIS NETWORK PROHIBITED
This is particularly interesting because it can be taken as either redundant,
as .0 notes, or incomplete, as in "Unauthorized access prohibited what?"
Clay
|
414.4 | | SKIVT::ROGERS | Lasciate ogni speranza, voi ch'entrate | Mon Sep 28 1987 10:49 | 5 |
| RE. .2:
But metrification is always expensive. :-)
Larry
|
414.5 | Metrification? Aaaarghhh! | IPG::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IPG Reading-UK | Mon Sep 28 1987 17:45 | 3 |
| Sorry, I wouldn't do this in any notes file but this one ...
Jeff.
|
414.6 | ;-D | INK::KALLIS | Raise Hallowe'en awareness. | Mon Sep 28 1987 18:05 | 5 |
| Re .last_couple:
How metrifying!
Stece Kallis, Jr.
|
414.7 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | I am not a free number, I am a telephone box | Tue Sep 29 1987 00:31 | 11 |
| The problem with the "welcome" messages was the result of some
U.S. law case where a hacker was acquitted on the grounds that he
was not intruding, because he had been "welcomed" to the system.
Now system managers are trying to strike a balance between
"Go away you nasty little brute", which may be slightly offensive
to authorised users, and anything which sounds the least bit
encouraging to unauthorised users.
Perhaps we should start another topic for a competition for
the best wording to meet this dilemma.
|
414.8 | NO TRESPASSING is sort of redundant but not really | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Tue Sep 29 1987 16:50 | 23 |
| Elsewhere in this file, I already commented on the sign
NO TRESPASSING
It's *sort of* redundant. "Trespassing" means violation of bounds already,
so presumably the "no" isn't needed.
On the otherhand, if someone were friendly, and welcomed your unannounced
wandering, they wouldn't put up a sign saying
TRESPASSING O.K.
or
WE WELCOME TRESPASSERS
Such messages wouldn't work, since by definition, if you have permission
to be there, you're not trespassing. Hence you're not doing what the
sign says you may ! (Perhaps you're doing something they don't like instead)
Anyone else appreciate what's troubling me in this matter ?
/Eric
|
414.9 | Trespassers will be the subject of litigation | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Men's sauna in corporation baths | Wed Sep 30 1987 09:33 | 23 |
| Re: .-1
I've seen notices that get round this problem by saying
TRESPASSERS WILL BE PROSECUTED
But whoever wrote the notice didn't consider some legal nicety
(English Law) about prosecution and civil law. I'm not sure,
but think the way it works is this: "prosecution" only takes
place in criminal proceedings (where cases are called "Regina
versus <alleged_miscreant>" rather than "<irate_citizen> versus
<alleged_trampler_over_civil_rights>". The Crown prosecutes
people, individuals just sue each other. And as trespassing
(on its own) isn't a criminal offence, no trespasser can ever
be prosecuted unless the Crown alleges some other offence.
Maybe there's some arcane crime like "Trespass in a Naval Dockyard"
(where almost anything is a capital offence); if so, I've never
heard of it.
bob
|
414.10 | | RUTLND::SATOW | | Wed Sep 30 1987 15:51 | 19 |
| Even where trespass has been made a crime by legislation, the phrase
has problems in any "innocent until proven guilty" jurisdiction.
No person could be a trespasser unless they had been convicted
of the crime of trespass (based on "innocent until proven
guilty")
No person could be convicted of the crime of trespass until
they had been prosecuted for trespass.
So maybe
TRESPASSERS HAVE BEEN PROSECUTED
would be more precise. Not meaningful, but more precise.
Clay
|
414.11 | the ultimate notice (well, for nonpilots) | INK::KALLIS | Raise Hallowe'en awareness. | Wed Sep 30 1987 16:37 | 12 |
| Re .10:
When I was in Huntsville, some friends of mine had a game room with
the following sign:
Welcome to the Playboy Room
TRESSPASSERS WILL BE VIOLATED
Well, I never saw any tresspassers enter _that_ room. :-)
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
414.12 | synchronicity | IND::KABEL | Rik SUBWAY::Kabel, DTN 333 6654 | Wed Sep 30 1987 17:45 | 10 |
| In 1973 my wife and I were working for the summer as a mother's
helpers on Chappaquidick (sp?). The house was where one would end
up if you missed the proper turn (non-turn, actually) for Teddy's
bridge. We had many unexpected visitors. Finally, we put up a
sign, the most prominent part of which read:
TRESPASSERS WILL BE VIOLATED
It was my wife's idea, but I dont know if she claims to have
invented, or only to have remembered it at the right time.
|
414.13 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Sep 30 1987 18:06 | 7 |
| Re .10:
Not having been convicted of trespassing does not make one not a
tresspasser.
-- edp
|
414.14 | Actions speak louder | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Wed Sep 30 1987 19:32 | 7 |
| Re: .10
One can be a trespasser without being a _convicted_ trespasser,
just as one can be a murderer without being a convicted murderer.
Why confuse the act with its official recognition?
Bernie
|
414.15 | So what? | ZWODEV::NOBLE | | Thu Oct 01 1987 12:03 | 10 |
| Re 414.13 (et al):
Precisely - I don't see what the big deal is here. The sign
saying "Trespassers will be prosecuted" merely states that
if you trespass you *will* be prosecuted - which is not implied
by any definition of "trespass". "Trespass" just means some boundary
has been violated, and does not imply that any punishment *will* be
meted.
...Rob
|
414.16 | Truth is a big enough deal | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Thu Oct 01 1987 18:53 | 17 |
| Re: .15
The big deal is that the statement made in .10, viz:
No person could be a trespasser unless they had been convicted
of the crime of trespass (based on "innocent until proven
guilty")
is nonsense.
[By the way, when I entered my reply to .10, I did not realize that edp
had already addressed the point.]
Bernie
|
414.17 | POLICE TAKE NOTICE | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Fri Oct 02 1987 10:42 | 9 |
| That reminds me of a serious question I've had for awhile. Consider:
POLICE TAKE NOTICE
Is this a sign instructing police to take notice ?
Or is it a sign warning me that police will notice what I do ?
/Eric
|
414.18 | All shall be forgiven... | CHARON::MCGLINCHEY | Get a Bigger Hammer | Fri Oct 02 1987 13:40 | 18 |
|
re trespassing:
A long time ago, a church near where I leved posted a
sign on the lawn:
Thou shalt not Trespass
clever, and not to be left unchallenged.
Late at night, I snuck onto the church lawn and taped
an addendum below the sign:
Forgive us our trespasses
-Glinch.
|
414.19 | From the forty acre wood | SKIVT::ROGERS | Lasciate ogni speranza, voi ch'entrate | Mon Oct 05 1987 10:04 | 7 |
| And then of course, Wol in Winnie the Poo, posted a sign reading:
TRESPASSERS W
which I've always liked. Just ambiguous enough to be interesting.
Larry
|
414.20 | Authorization, Prohibition, Permission | DELNI::CANTOR | Dave C. | Thu Oct 29 1987 10:58 | 22 |
| Back to the original topic.
No, I don't think that 'unauthorized' automatically means
prohibited. An 'authorized' activity or individual is one for
which someone (with "authority") has explicitly given permission.
There are some activities which are permitted even without
explicit permission. (E.g., walking into the lobby of almost
any Digital site, during normal business hours is permitted
to anyone without any prior authorization.)
Of course, there are some situations in which all activities
are prohibited unless specifically authorized, but there are
situations, too, where all activities are allowed unless
specifically prohibited. (E.g., the US military seems to
have this attitude.)
So 'unauthorized' doesn't necessarily mean 'prohibited,' and
the warning
UNAUTHORIZED ACCESS PROHIBITED
means that specific authorization is required for access.
|
414.21 | A recursive notice | GENRAL::JHUGHES | NOTE, learn, and inwardly digest | Sun Nov 22 1987 21:39 | 16 |
| Well, we seem to have discussed all kinds of legal and semantic
issues in this note, but so far we are missing any samples of what
the title calls for, namely "recursive notices".
Here is an example which contains almost literal recursiveness -- and
in another sense I too may be committing recursion, since I believe I
filed it in another note many months ago -- if so please forgive me.
As a teenager in England I traveled to school every day by train, and
used to observe a sign posted by the London Midland and Scottish
Railway on their station in Poynton, Cheshire. The intention of the sign
was presumably to dissuade people from taking a dangerous short cut
across the tracks from one platform to another, but the effect was somewhat
spoiled by the fractured grammar:
PASSENGERS MUST NOT CROSS THE LINE ONLY BY THE FOOTBRIDGE
|
414.22 | | TERZA::ZANE | freedom means only to be who you are... | Mon Nov 23 1987 05:16 | 11 |
|
And I saw a different one when I was returning to Heathrow in the Tube:
Passengers, please do NOT cross the lines --
It takes us hours to untangle them.
Terza
|
414.23 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Nov 24 1987 19:31 | 7 |
| I was rewarded yesterday with the message "Internal consistancy error".
Since an error _inside_ "consistancy" is an "Internal 'consistancy'
error", the message is pretty much correct.
-- edp
|
414.24 | f$message(0) | IND::BOWERS | Count Zero Interrupt | Tue Nov 24 1987 23:24 | 9 |
| There's always the VMS message corresponding to status code 0, which
more or less, asserts that it isn't a message...
%NONAME-W-NOMSG, Message number 00000000
-dave
|
414.25 | | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Mon Dec 05 1988 17:27 | 10 |
| In the U.K., if you don't pay your electricity bill you get a red
'notice' that begins:
IGNORE THIS NOTICE IF YOU HAVE RECENTLY PAID YOUR BILL.
-- so I suppose you always have to read on...
Richard.
|