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by ziplinerss
296 days ago
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> different from conditionally having access, or having access for a pre-set period of time. Irrelevant since the terms allowlist/denylist do not presuppose conditionallity or pre-set time limits. > If someone says to add an IP address to an allow access list, that’s longer Allowlist/denylist (9 + 8 chars) is shorter than whitelist/blacklist (9 + 9 chars). > Inventing a personal language Sounds like you think the proposal was to invent a whole new language (or one per person)? I would be against that too. But it is really only about updating a technical industry term pair to a more descriptive and less semantically loaded pair. Win-win. > we aren’t going to solve racism by literally removing black and white from our language. Changing to allowlist/denylist would not remove the terms black/white from language. There is good reason for making the change that do not involve any claim that doing so would solve racism. |
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They don't pre-suppose anything. They're neologisms. So you have to provide the context when you use them versus being able to leverage what the other person already knows.
> Allowlist/denylist (9 + 8 chars) is shorter than whitelist/blacklist (9 + 9 chars)
The point is you can't just say allow list this block of IPs and walk away in the way saying whitelist these works.
> really only about updating a technical industry term pair to a more descriptive and less semantically loaded pair
Eh, it looks more like creating jargon to signal group membership.
> There is good reason for making the change that do not involve any claim that doing so would solve racism
I guess I'm not seeing it. Black = bad and white = good are deep cultural priors across the world.
Trying to bend a global language like English to accomodate the fact that we've turned those words into racial designations strikes me as silly. (The term blacklist predates [1] the term black as a racial designator, at least in English, I believe by around 100 years [2]. If we want to go pedantic in the opposite direction, no human actually has black or white skin in natural light.)
(For what it’s worth, I’ve genuinely enjoyed this discussion.)
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blacklisting#Origins_of_the_te...
[2] https://nabado.co.ke/2025/01/05/the-origins-and-evolution-of...