--On Friday, 04 April, 2008 11:56 -0400 Derek Atkins
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Harald Alvestrand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> Diving straight into armchairing myself, I'll just note that
>> under EU data privacy laws, it's illegal to collect personal
>> info for which you have no legitimate purpose - so if we
>> never use those emails for anything, we shouldn't collect
>> them.
>
> I've used them. One time when I chaired a BOF I collected the
> email addresses to personally ask if they wanted to be involved
> in the mailing list. (It was done this way because the list
> was not set up prior to the meeting). So, having email
> addresses was very important to inform everyone in the room of
> the list address.
Yes. And, as a sometime BOF or WG chair, I've often asked the
secretariat for copies of the blue sheets (and gotten them) to
check names of spellings against the minutes, to write people
asking for clarification about what they said, and to get my own
sense of the profile and pattern of those participating in the
meetings compared to those who were participating on the list.
Some of those uses require email addresses, some don't. But the
activity is, IMO, legitimate and useful enough that I'm
reluctant to give up the email addresses unless someone
demonstrates that there is a real problem that needs solving.
I won't repeat what others have said about the presence or
absence of the problem, but I'm not convinced either.
john
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