Almost this exact situation happened when I worked at Oracle. They went on to tell me that they didn't care if the data was structured incorrectly, just fix the parser anyway. I did exactly that. Any commercial browser compensates for bad data any time it is used to cruise the internet. But, I know this story in no way applies to Plucker :-)Also, if you had written a web browser and the client complained that it didn't work with a "broken" HTML document I don't think you would tell the client "Yes, my application doesn't work correctly"; I guess you instead might tell the client that "Your data is structured incorrectly" ;-)
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