--On 23 June 2009 13:59:48 +0200 Claudio Telmon <claudio(_at_)telmon(_dot_)org>
wrote:
Ian Eiloart wrote:
However, the burden placed
on end users should not be a cognitive burden - most won't cope.
If I understand what you mean, then IMHO this framework should pass this
cognitive test, since the availability of tokens to correspondents (and
spammers) should be easy to understand... well, much easier than
failures of digital signatures, DSN, and locks on web pages, anyway...
It the behaviour of the user is required to change, then that's a bad
thing. I've not read the spec, so I'm not judging this proposal. Just
correcting the claim that you can't burden the use at all. You can, but
ideally you want to do it in ways that the user doesn't notice. If your
spec requires a user to find something in addition to an email address,
then it needs to be extremely easy to do.
Still, we're already in a position where people are fearful of publishing
email addresses, so this spec might alleviate that problem. But, it isn't
fundamental to combatting spam.
--
Ian Eiloart
IT Services, University of Sussex
01273-873148 x3148
For new support requests, see http://www.sussex.ac.uk/its/help/
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