Can't hurt!
But seriously, that's only found in documents designed to be submitted to
courts, presumably so the written transcript is clear as to what is being
discussed ("Mr. X, I direct your attention to exibit A32, page 912, line
6, did you or did you not say that....")
Meanwhile John K. explains to me that since no one is supposed to cite
ID's it shouldn't be made easy. Maybe he shoulda been a lawyer?
On Mon, 21 Apr 2003, Ole J. Jacobsen wrote:
Isn't it LINE numbers you lawyers want? :-)
Ole
Ole J. Jacobsen
Editor and Publisher, The Internet Protocol Journal
Tel: +1 408-527-8972 GSM: +1 415-370-4628
E-mail: ole(_at_)cisco(_dot_)com URL: http://www.cisco.com/ipj
On Mon, 21 Apr 2003, Michael Froomkin - U.Miami School of Law wrote:
While right-thinking people no doubt cite to paragraph and section
numbers, the world is not entirely composed of right-thinking people.
Having consistent canonical page numbers eliminates a source of potential
confusion especially when dealing with groups outside the IETF...
On Mon, 21 Apr 2003, Paul Hoffman / IMC wrote:
Page breaks are highly desirable for I-Ds, because it makes it easier
for people to print them out.
Um, which software that takes a long text file *doesn't* put in page
breaks as it sends it to the printer? This has been a standard part
of nearly every word processing and text editing program for two
decades now...
--Paul Hoffman, Director
--Internet Mail Consortium
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