On Thu, Jul 9, 2015 at 9:05 PM, Chris Angelico <ros...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Even if it respects that, there's no way that Mailman can know to > respect his ridiculous copyright restriction. > Well, sure. But Mailman is probably not alone in this regard. In case it wasn't clear from Tony the Tiger's post (everything was wrapped in my copy), here's how those headers all look in-the-raw: X-Copyright: (C) Copyright 2015 Stefan Ram. All rights reserved. Distribution through any means other than regular usenet channels is forbidden. It is forbidden to publish this article in the world wide web. It is forbidden to change URIs of this article into links. It is forbidden to remove this notice or to transfer the body without this notice. X-No-Archive: Yes Archive: no X-No-Archive-Readme: "X-No-Archive" is only set, because this prevents some services to mirror the article via the web (HTTP). But Stefan Ram hereby allows to keep this article within a Usenet archive server with only NNTP access without any time limitation. X-No-Html: yes So he's got five headers, two of which you would clearly expect mail software to recognize (X-No-Archive and Archive), two which must be for human consumption only (X-Copyright and X-No-Archive-Readme). I'm not sure about X-No-Html. A quick Google search for that header returned nothing useful. Skip
-- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list