a black-hat issue and a white hat issue?
Dear teachers
Please look at the following sentence:
This is not a black-hat-versus-white-hat issue.
I wonder what a black-hat issue is and what a white-hat issue is.
I searched the internet for these phrases by Google and found some sentences containing "black-hat issue" or "white-hat issue". But I still can not figure out their meanings according to the context: I just vaguely feel that white-hat issues refer to those things which are not harmful while black-hat issues refer to those harmful things to all sides.
but I doubt it.
Please help me with this, and by the way, are these expressions a little outdated?
Thanks
Re: a black-hat issue and a white hat issue?
Quote:
Originally Posted by japanjapan
Dear teachers
Please look at the following sentence:
This is not a black-hat-versus-white-hat issue.
I wonder what a black-hat issue is and what a white-hat issue is.
I searched the internet for these phrases by Google and found some sentences containing "black-hat issue" or "white-hat issue". But I still can not figure out their meanings according to the context: I just vaguely feel that white-hat issues refer to those things which are not harmful while black-hat issues refer to those harmful things to all sides.
but I doubt it.
Please help me with this, and by the way, are these expressions a little outdated?
Thanks
In my opinion, these terms are references back to the days of televison westerns. In almost all cases, the good guys wore whote cowboy hats and the bad guys wore black cowboys hats. When someone says "white-hat" vs. "black-hat" it means "good" vs. "bad". In this case, the writer is saying that people have honest disagreement about this issue and it does not mean that either side is necessarily made up of good people or bad people.
Re: a black-hat issue and a white hat issue?
hi
In my opinion, these terms are references back to the days of televison westerns. In almost all cases, the good guys wore whote cowboy hats and the bad guys wore black cowboys hats. When someone says "white-hat":-o
www.sentersoftech.com:lol:
Re: a black-hat issue and a white hat issue?
Thinking that more context would be useful, I googled the statement and came up, surprisingly, with only 1 use. The case was regarding interns suing hospitals for being overworked and under-paid. The defendants then tried to get Congress to change laws on their behalf, and were called out for it.
A senator, speaking for the defence, said "This is not a black-hat-versus-white-hat issue".
So it seems that it does have to do with the hacker-generated definitions: The senator is claiming that the defence is not trying to unfairly exploit holes in the system, which is what black-hat hackers do.