Posted on 06/02/2004 11:31:34 AM PDT by CFW
What is the origin of this phrase?
All that is not permitted is forbidden
It is the foundation for our proposed local zoning code.
Can anyone give me some history, it seems very familiar.
"All that is not mandatory is prohibited."
1984?
That sounds like a line from 1984. But don't quote me on that.
Taliban?
There are four Government Models in Eruope:
The English Model - All is permitted, except that which is forbidden.
The German Model - All is forbidden, except that which is permitted.
The Russian Model - All is forbidden, including that which is permitted.
The French Model - All is permitted, including that which is forbidden.
Ask your local firewall administrator.
It's how you setup an access list on a router. If you expressly permit certain addresses, all others are forbidden. :)
GOOGLE the whole phrase in quotes and LQQK at the results..........Interesting..........
All that is not permitted is forbidden, unless you are a democrat.
Thanks. That helps to explain the origin of all those holes in Swiss Cheese.
I believe it should be: Everything not permitted is forbidden.
Local zoning ordinances are getting out of hand.
Local zoning ordinances are getting out of hand.
No building/occupancy/land use, etc. permit = illegal.
Policy-based controls may be characterized as either mandatory or discretionary. With mandatory controls, only administrators and not owners of resources may make decisions that bear on or derive from policy. Only an administrator may change the category of a resource, and no one may grant a right of access that is explicitly forbidden in the access control policy.
Access controls that are not based on the policy are characterized as discretionary controls by the U.S. government and as need-to-know controls by other organizations. The latter term connotes least privilege those who may read an item of data are precisely those whose tasks entail the need.
It is important to note that mandatory controls are prohibitive (i.e., all that is not expressly permitted is forbidden), not only permissive. Only within that context do discretionary controls operate, prohibiting still more access with the same exclusionary principle.
Discretionary access controls can extend beyond limiting which subjects can gain what type of access to which objects. Administrators can limit access to certain times of day or days of the week. Typically, the period during which access would be permitted is 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Such a limitation is designed to ensure that access takes place only when supervisory personnel are present, to discourage unauthorized use of data. Further, subjects rights to access might be suspended when they are on vacation or leave of absence. When subjects leave an organization altogether, their rights must be terminated rather than merely suspended.
Schiller's Wallenstein had the line that "Whatever is not forbiden, is permitted". [Wallenstein was the Austrian Catholic commander in the 30 Years War [1618-1648] opposing Lutheran Swedish King, Gustavus Adolphus.] It was meant to express the extremely lax discipline in Wallenstein's Catholic army, anything not explicitly verboten was erlaubt. The norms of the day imposed numerous tacit constraints on behavior that were assumed to be universally understood.
It's a quote from Orwell's Animal Farm.
Expressio unius est exclusio alterius.
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