You provided an example of where arguing against regulation was ill-conceived in hindsight. I offered an obvious example of the opposite (everyone against plane hijacking -> regulation -> air travel is made worse for everyone without much improvement for the primary issue).
> Rationalization driven by new regulation can actually reduce [paperwork] instead.
Ha! Anything is possible, I suppose.
I'd point out that the TBM were not ratified by committee (much less a government) and were rammed through by unilateral Mozilla fiat.
The CA/B Forum did in fact ratify these rules, which is why they're in its "Baseline Requirements".
They (I would say deliberately) stalled the process to actually make those rules binding on the CAs and that is where Mozilla used their fiat powers to just require this anyway, knowing that all the other trust stores would come for the ride and actually nobody at CA/B offered a legitimate reason not to do this, they just (again I would say deliberately) allowed it to get procedurally bogged down so that nothing would happen for a period of time.
You provided an example of where arguing against regulation was ill-conceived in hindsight. I offered an obvious example of the opposite (everyone against plane hijacking -> regulation -> air travel is made worse for everyone without much improvement for the primary issue).
> Rationalization driven by new regulation can actually reduce [paperwork] instead.
Ha! Anything is possible, I suppose.
I'd point out that the TBM were not ratified by committee (much less a government) and were rammed through by unilateral Mozilla fiat.