Quote:
Originally Posted by
Mad Eye Touz
Aspen was the only one, but Vickers asking about getting into Faculty quarters made her laugh. Obviously Ravenclaws would ask questions just for the sake of asking questions, curiosity and all that, but... mostly... she figured he was asking for a more specific reason. Haha. Boys.
She didn't bother raising her hand to answer the question. She hadn't bothered answering of the other questions up until now either.
"They don't NEED limited access." Shrug. "If an area needed to be truly restricted, like the Hogwarts gates, it'd be truly restricted with charms and such. Passwords just work as deterrents. Or challenges for those students that get bored." With enough time, there wasn't a password at Hogwarts that wasn't breakable in Aspen's opinion.
Professors should password protect their classes. Imagine all the students that would be left outside? hahaha!mental-cackling!
There was... laughing. He turned his head as his gaze fell on the Ravenclaw brunette. His lips twitched upwards at the corners, not sure if he should laugh with Aspen or grimace at the fact that Aspen was possibly laughing at him. It was a legitimate answer he thought, because he was finding it hard to imagine certain Faculty members like the Headmistress sleeping in a couch in her office. Scabbior? Maybe.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Kaos.Doodles
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Now that they had a list of places, Scabior was no longer distracted. He felt alert and ready to teach. "So as we agreed to before, passwords are used to restrict people and limit access. Why would places like Common Rooms and the Prefects bathroom or any of the other places listed need to have limited access to get in?"
Now
why the passwords? Vickers pondered the question for a few minutes. If it was all about elitism and privilege, why bother with passwords at all? Wouldnt it be easier and more obvious to the not-so-lucky to just keep to membership tokens and exclusive invites?
"The primary purpose of passwords is for security Professor...." he finally spoke after raising his hand
"...and sometimes its not always about keeping people out, but more so keeping whats inside from getting out or being taken, as most of the time people who are legitimately given a password to certain places or things are entrusted to keep whatevers inside safe or respectable."