On Tue, Jul 26, 2005 at 04:30:12PM +0200, Mario Salzer wrote: > Consider for example a web page with textual content like follows: > > user: name > jabber: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > popoflux: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I just made my Jabber ID match my e-mail address, but from the context of some of the e-mails I get at that address, I can tell that they actually got it from a page that only lists the address as a JID. So, yes, this happens. Having your own domain and running the e-mail and Jabber services yourself helps. I suppose ISPs that provide Jabber services should try and issue a Jabber ID that matches the e-mail address you get from them. I have seen (many times) ISPs having [EMAIL PROTECTED] as the e-mail address and then [EMAIL PROTECTED] as the Jabber ID. This is really not needed. The use of DNS SVR records can help fix this. -- Groetjes, ralphm _______________________________________________ jdev mailing list [email protected] http://mail.jabber.org/mailman/listinfo/jdev
