On Fri, Jul 20, 2001 at 02:16:46PM -0600, Vernon Schryver wrote:
> > From: "Marshall T. Rose" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> What would you say if many of the many third party RFC repositories
> started sending you periodic reminders to update your biographical and
> bibliographical entries? So far it seems that only this single
> outfit is doing that, and that's part of why I agreed that you might
> decide you had or would solicit this bulk mail and so say it is not spam.
> But if you don't draw the on principle, how do you draw it at all?
You draw the line based on the fact that you put your contact information
in a publication in the first place. If you don't want to be contacted
about an RFC you've written then don't put any contact information
in it. IMNSHO, the simple act of putting your contact information
in there is a solicitation for contact about that document, bulk or
otherwise.
> > in fact, i'll go out on a limb and say that i'd certainly be happy if the
> > rfc editor had the resources to maintain such a database.
>
> That's a whole other issue that has nothing to do with this bulk mail.
>
> I think you can make a case that submitting an I-D to the RFC Editor
> includes to a solicitation for related bulk mail from the Editor for
> at least the life of the I-D. Shepherding an I-D until it gets an
> RFC number may also amount to a lifetime solicitation of bulk mail
> from the Editor. Thus, if this stuff were sent on behalf of the RFC
> Editor maintaining such a database, it would be solicited bulk mail
> and so not spam.
Nope. If you don't want to be contacted about the document you wrote/co-wrote
then don't put the contact info in there in the first place. What
is it there for if not to contact you about that document, regardless
of whether or not the contact is automated or not?
-MM
--
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Michael Mealling | Vote Libertarian! | urn:pin:1
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Democracy gives an aura of legitimacy to acts that
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