Dnia 21.10.2022 o godz. 13:42:31 Grant Taylor via mailop pisze: > On 10/21/22 1:02 PM, Jaroslaw Rafa via mailop wrote: > > As many have pointed out, putting this information online may be harmful > > to privacy and even facilitate criminal acts against you. > > I still feel like there is room for an abstraction layer wherein you provide > a postal address and telephone number which does (eventually) make it to > you, but does not expose personal / private information. E.g. "You can > contact us via our legal representative at $POSTAL_ADDRESS and > $PHONE_NUMBER."
Assume you don't have any other street address you could use, which is the case for most regular people (most regular people also don't have a "legal representative", they just hire a lawyer only when there's a need to - a court case or similar). Phone number is less of a problem, because you can buy a prepaid SIM card only for that purpose, and put it into some old phone that you don't normally use. > Ignoring the privacy implications for a few minutes, my understanding is > that private (non-commercial) mail servers can also put the same information > / imprint / impressum on their web site and thereby qualify to be white > listed by T-Online. Is that not correct? That is correct, but you can't ignore the privacy implications, as they are the main concern here (at least for me). -- Regards, Jaroslaw Rafa r...@rafa.eu.org -- "In a million years, when kids go to school, they're gonna know: once there was a Hushpuppy, and she lived with her daddy in the Bathtub." _______________________________________________ mailop mailing list mailop@mailop.org https://list.mailop.org/listinfo/mailop