Having lived through a period where email addresses as we know them ( f...@example.com) were pre-emptively declared to be a usability disaster zone, and seeing the resultant train-wreck of X.400 addressing being foisted upon the UK academic community as a simple, clear, and intuitive replacement:
"G=Harald;S=Alvestrand;O=Uninett;P=Uninett;A=;C=no" see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X.400 …having seen this (-^) to be declared as self-evidently better and then watch it die as RFC822 took over the world, then I for one am inclined to ask tor just to roll out 53(?)-character Base32 addresses and "see what happens". Trying to forward-guess the community seems often to land in disaster. -a ps: if the above looks familiar, it's because the X.500 directory services that were invented to support X.400 email were later resurrected from the dead as LDAP, because you can't keep a bad idea down in the "identity" space. pps: i was a university sysadmin in the early 1990s; the ISODE consortium literally gave us a high-end server to deploy X.400 and X.500 code on, a server which sat idle because nobody liked X.500. So I used it to develop password cracking software. -- http://dropsafe.crypticide.com/aboutalecm -- tor-talk mailing list - tor-talk@lists.torproject.org To unsubscribe or change other settings go to https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk