Iljitsch van Beijnum wrote:
> Obviously life is a bit more complex than "add PKI and signature to
> From: and stir". If I get a letter addressed to me from the tax
> people, I'll take it, regardless of how it happened to arrive. Junk
> mail on the other hand (the paper variety) will meet the inside of my
> paper bin without delay if I receive it through the mail, but if my
> boss gives it to me and asks me to look at it, I look at it.
>
> With many of the current protocols, SMTP being a prime example, there
> are very many ways to do things that weren't foreseen, or at least not
> specifically accommodated, in the original protocol. That was great
> because it allowed innovation. Unfortunately, the most innovative
> people around these days are the spammers and fishers, so these days,
> when we come up with new protocols, we need to specifically allow
> everything that's good so implementations/users can reject everything
> else. I.e., a new mail protocol will have to address things like
> forwarding and mailinglists explicitly.
I couldn't make sense of anything but the last sentence, but I agree
with the last sentence.


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