Dear Mr. Salsman,
My quest for a solution to the issue of email fraud did not solicit
for alternative energy solutions. If this is your idea of a solution to
the problem, I think it's pathetic. Nigeria (and Nigerians as a whole)
are good people and you cannot degrade them for mail frauds from a few
unscrupulous individuals. I question your own motives and you should be
seen as one of those fraudsters. Are you trying to deny them of their revenue
from oil as a country or are you looking for a new market for your so-called
hydrogen gas? I suggest you take your marketing gimmicks somewhere else
and look for a sustainable victim. Nigerians will not buy it, neither will
IETF. So Long and I apologise for adding to the spam.....
"James P. Salsman" wrote:
I would like to know more about the decision process
involving
censorship on the IETF list.
About October 5th I sent a reply to a message from "Cel"
http://ietf.org/mail-archive/ietf/Current/msg13899.html
which specifically asked for any ideas to stop the solicitation
from the "DEPARTMENT OF PETROLEUM RESOURCES ... LAGOS, NIGERIA"
http://ietf.org/mail-archive/ietf/Current/msg13896.html
I suggested these URLs:
http://www.phoenixproject.net/
(hydrogen as an alternative to petrol)
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=22166&cid=2377370
(codeposition fusion)
My message was apparently lost. I find it odd that a well-known
scam would be allowed while honest suggestions for less
destructive alternatives to a probable cause giving rise to the
"Nigerian Letter" scam would be censored.
I think the likely explanation is that an IETF administrator had
decided to pull messages regarding the subject, and found mine
inappropriate (and perhaps a joke) for a subjective reason.
In fact, I think all engineers, even those involved primarily
with communication technology, have a pressing need to support
the study of fossil fuel alternatives.
The way I always hoped this would happen was a greater support
for telecommuting. But my attempts to encourage additional
telecommuting to the Cisco V.P. of Information Systems, when I
worked for him, were met with more direct and staunch forms of
suppression.
Cheers,
James
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