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One aspect of Java security is language restrictions designed not to let a Java applet or application access memory on the machine outside of its own space.
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Applets have additional restrictions:
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they can never run a local executable program;
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they cannot communicate with any host other than the server from which they were downloaded (the originating host);
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they cannot read or write to the local computer's file system, except through the browser mechanism;
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they cannot find out information about the local computer (see table on next slide for details).
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As of summer 1996, no known applets have seriously broken security to steal client information or trash the local disk. Exceptions:
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applets have been written to use up arbitrary amounts of client cpu.
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applets with native code can trash the local disk. So far, native code is disallowed on publicly released browsers.
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