docs/115774: [patch] Mailing list users aren't warned about public exposure of information
Warren Block
wblock at wonkity.com
Fri Aug 24 21:40:11 UTC 2007
The following reply was made to PR docs/115774; it has been noted by GNATS.
From: Warren Block <wblock at wonkity.com>
To: Remko Lodder <remko at elvandar.org>
Cc: freebsd-gnats-submit at freebsd.org
Subject: Re: docs/115774: [patch] Mailing list users aren't warned about
public exposure of information
Date: Fri, 24 Aug 2007 15:20:47 -0600 (MDT)
On Fri, 24 Aug 2007, Remko Lodder wrote:
>>> Description:
>> Users who submit messages to mailing lists aren't warned about the public
>> exposure of their email address or other information.
>>> How-To-Repeat:
>> Submit a message to a FreeBSD mailing list.
>>> Fix:
>> Apply this patch to
>> usr/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/eresources/chapter.sgml.
>>
>> Patch attached with submission follows:
>>
>> --- chapter.sgml.orig Thu Aug 23 19:56:29 2007
>> +++ chapter.sgml Thu Aug 23 20:28:12 2007
>> @@ -40,6 +40,14 @@
>> mailing lists ultimately fail as an effective communications medium
>> for
>> the project.</para>
>>
>> + <caution>
>> + <para>Email addresses and other information you submit to &os; lists
>> + will be visible to many people through multiple methods (the list,
>> + the web, newsgroups, and others). When protecting privacy is a
>> + concern, consider using a disposable secondary email address and
>> + posting only public information.</para>
>> + </caution>
>> +
>> <note>
>> <para><emphasis>If you wish to test your ability to send to
>> &os; lists, send a test message to &a.test.name;.</emphasis>
>
> I am not sure whether we 'must' explicitly mention this. As on any
> mailinglist , that has publically available archives. I dont see
> any other big list mentioning this. I dont feel confident with this
> idea.
The issue comes up on the mailing lists from time to time. Currently,
people are told after posting that their formerly-private email address
has now been posted around the world, and it's too late to do anything
about that.
Isn't it better to explain that beforehand?
Maybe a <note> instead of <caution>?
-Warren Block * Rapid City, South Dakota USA
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