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 Posted by Mark on 01/13/06 20:24 
Stut wrote: 
 
> Mark wrote: 
>  
>>Gabor Hojtsy wrote: 
>>   
>> 
>>>Dear Pop Mihai Sergiu, 
>>> 
>>>By sending this email you (again) posted to a public mailing list which 
>>>is archived at multiple places, of which really few are under our 
>>>control. There would be no point in removing your message from our 
>>>archives, as it is also posted to an unknown number of other archives 
>>>around the internet. 
>>> 
>>>Also there is no point in attaching a signature below your message which 
>>>prohibits the review of the contents, as the signature is only read 
>>>after the message is alread read. 
>>>     
>>> 
>>It should also be noted that simply saying something is "confidential" is 
>>not enough. The sender has to exercise a level of care to prevent "private 
>>and confidential" information and communications from becoming public. 
>>Obviously posting any such information to a fundamentally public forum 
>>negates any such expectations. It is like screaming, at the top of your 
>>lungs, in a public venue, a secret. You would not have any reasonable 
>>expectation of privacy even if you screamed "don't tell anyone." 
>>   
>> 
>  
> Nice analogy. 
>  
>>However, his rant does present a real issue. Forcing people to use "real" 
>>email addresses exposes them to SPAM and abuse. I would suggest, if 
>>possible and resources permit, that some sort of aliasing/registration 
>>system be deployed where every post is may by "anonABCDEFGH@php.net" and 
>>every "ABCDEFGH" is a registered user who's email address is known. 
>>   
>> 
>  
> I would have to disagree with this. I've been on lots of 'public' 
> mailing lists for quite a while and this is the first time I've ever 
> seen a complaint of this nature. I really think the OP should have taken 
> more care to read the mailing lists page on php.net before signing up. 
> It clearly states that there are archives and that they are searchable. 
> If privacy was a concern then these archives should have been checked to 
> make sure they obscure email addresses. 
>  
> If there is any issue I think it's that the above mentioned web page 
> does not make it clear that there are lots of archives in addition to 
> those mentioned that php.net does not control. At any rate I don't see 
> any need for php.net to implement a system for anonymising posts - that 
> would be a huge waste of resources as a result of a single complaint out 
> of what is probably many thousands of list members. 
>  
 
Well, I'm pretty sure that for every *one* verbal gripe there are hundreds 
or thousands of unspoken gripes. I was reluctant to post to this news group 
for the reasons of spam and abuse. I upgraded my spamassasin and went for 
it. 
 
I have a long dead PHP account from when I originally contributed msession 
to PHP (about 5 or 6 years ago) and I STILL get spam!! 
 
I think to say "it isn't an issue" is a level of denial. I suspect there are 
many people who just won't post because of the restriction. 
 
Anyway, <RANT> I have long since learned that the PHP group does not like 
change of any kind except that suggested from within a small group of core 
people, and despite any reasoned argument will resort to denial, ignorance, 
and/or ad homonym to refuse or belittle any such suggestion.</RANT> it is 
just a suggestion, do with it as you please.
 
  
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