On Sun, 16 May 2004, theGrafixGuy wrote:
> (the web is not the (Internet)
Yes that was correct.
>
> You are CORRECT in that, the Internet is a part of the web. However,
> RESPECTFULLY, you sir are completely INCORRECT in the claim that SPAM is NOT
> on topic. To say so would be like claiming the
-Original Message-
From: James Ellis [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, May 16, 2004 4:56 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [WSG] Standards, SPAM, and accessibility - three hot topics all
in one
No, the various anti-spam laws, solutions etc aren't a W3c standard and
spam p
No, the various anti-spam laws, solutions etc aren't a W3c standard and
spam problems/solutions aren't solely web based (the web is not the
Internet). The discussion on spam and the relevant governing laws of a
country (which don't apply outside of that country) should be directed
at a dedicate
On Behalf Of Michael Zeltner
> Sent: Sunday, 16 May 2004 7:49 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [WSG] Standards, SPAM, and accessibility - three
> hot topics all in one
>
>
> Am 16.05.2004 um 11:06 schrieb theGrafixGuy:
>
> > First we have standards - pretty
Am 16.05.2004 um 11:06 schrieb theGrafixGuy:
First we have standards - pretty easy sell - build the site right and
it will display as intended. Does this mean that his staff webmaster
HAS to learn XHTML or CSS or is there a way to be standards compliant
and use html only with the PROPER use of t
I need to add, this, the sig file below is my experimentation in regards to
compliance for the SPAM.
And no, it isn't a license to SPAM by any means, but does it provide the
required data to be in compliance with the law?
Brian Grimmer
theGrafixGuy
http://www.thegrafixguy.com
503-887-4943
925