It looks for license metadata in the following forms: https://www.gnu.org/software/librejs/free-your-_javascript_.html
It seems a crazy strategy. If GNU distributions used this kind of analysis instead of trusting software from subscribed repositories, all our computers could be a jungle (either with scripts and compiled files). How does LibreJS check an script's license? El 22/02/18 a les 18:43, Ivan Zaigralin ha escrit: From what I can pick up, LibreJS tries to detect and whitelist "trivial" code first, meaning, the code which an algorithm can recognize as data-like and harmless. For all other code, it checks the license. I don't have details on how these things are done, but both can clearly be programmed in a variety of ways.
On Thursday, February 22, 2018 10:57:28 Narcis Garcia wrote:
I was asking about the CURRENT principle for LibreJS, not for "good" or "bad" of theoretically prossibilities.
El 22/02/18 a les 09:35, Ivan Zaigralin ha escrit:
On Thursday, February 22, 2018 08:43:38 Narcis Garcia wrote:
Which is the principle for LibreJS to approve _javascript_ functions and/or files? A license mention?
Can be regarded as necessary, but not sufficient.
A signature?
Useful for creating a trust model between users and web parties, but this is already implemented by https+noscript, and it solves a different problem, not directly freedom-related.
A well-known functions comparison? A code analysis? It replaces funcions?
A code analysis is pointless. Detecting obfuscated code, in particular, is an intractable problem. If you could define "obfuscated" formally, chances are, there would be a formal proof that the detection is unsolvable by a TM. But generally speaking, a good way to obfuscate is by writing a virtual assembly interpreter, and then feeding it "binaries" which appear to be perfectly cromulent, poetic even, _javascript_ sources. And obfuscated code cannot be considered free.
None of this is purely academic. Dynamic, obfuscated _javascript_ bitcash miners are all the rage right now. This is where we are today.
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