Jim,
JF> To state it a different way, what's important isn't who the sender is, but
whether the
JF> sender is authorized to use that email address. In a sense we're making
the domain
Actually, I don't find "authorization" all that interesting.
Necessary, perhaps, but not interesting.
What is interesting is whether a gross violator can be properly
penalized. That's different than saying that someone gave the
permission (authorization) before they screwed up.
d/
--
Dave Crocker <dcrocker-at-brandenburg-dot-com>
Brandenburg InternetWorking <www.brandenburg.com>
Sunnyvale, CA USA <tel:+1.408.246.8253>