> Paolo Bolzoni wrote: >> The world would be a much better place if we could ban signatures and >> non pure-text emails. Alas...
The world is a better place for it neither banning, nor trying to ban, such things. First, how do you ban signatures without banning people? Many people work in businesses which mandate signatures. If we attempted to ban signatures we'd be telling people, "unless you have a personal email account, you don't deserve to talk to people." Second, how do you ban signatures? That would be an interesting problem in AI, and would lead to false positives. Again, this would have the effect of barring some people from communicating. Third, define "non pure-text". If you're requiring 7-bit ASCII then you're telling people from non-English-speaking countries that they can't communicate. And once you open it up to Unicode, you've introduced a huge amount of attack surface -- I can't think of a coherent argument that says "we'll support arbitrary character sets including Unicode, but HTML is evil because of the attack surface it presents." Fourth, why is *forbidding a capability* considered a feature? Forbidding the misuse of a capability, sure, I can see that as a feature. But every now and again I try to present math in this mailing list, and I have two choices: (a) ASCII art, which doesn't render correctly on many platforms, or (b) Embed a LaTeX image into an HTML email We shouldn't be angry about capabilities -- we should be angry about people using them inappropriately. _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users