On 15-Feb-99 Roeland M.J. Meyer wrote:
>  Not necessarily. Given sufficient resources and careful crafting of
>  requirements, all things are implement able. It is largely a matter of
>  cost/effectiveness. IOW, is the solution larger than the problem? To answer
>  that, one must first define the problem. We haven't done that yet. We know
>  what the legal/political problem is, but we really don't know what the
>  technical problems are until we start working possible solution-sets for
>  the legal/political problem. Since the problem is primarily legal, that
>  must be worked first. Technical and logistical issues only work to
>  constrain the solution-set.

How is the problem primarily legal?  I think this is a case of cart before the
horse, really.

The problem is primarly technical.

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E-Mail: William X. Walsh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: 15-Feb-99
Time: 01:15:23
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"We may well be on our way to a society overrun by hordes
of lawyers, hungry as locusts." 
- Chief Justice Warren Burger, US Supreme Court, 1977

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