>​The problem is the concept itself since it will require every app to have 
>coded into it when a given feature was removed should it attempt to support it 
>when present.

Yes.

It dates back to the very early days (when SSLeay was developed on clay 
tablets), when the default was "get it all" and specific define's were used to 
turn off small specific things.

In the 20 years since then, the world has moved to "safe by default" which is 
different.

Oh well.
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