At 10:45 PM 1/12/2004, Vernon Schryver wrote...
Mr. Sauve could rent an IP address that is not on dial-up or dynamic
blacklists and run his systems there.
Proven wrong, Vernon now changes his tack to one of trying to rationalize
interference with legitimate email and attempting to place the burden on those
who wish to use the Internet as designed, not as damaged by his beloved
blacklists.
As I said, fascist. He has learned to use whois and Google, though, and seems
very self-impressed at his ability to learn such simple things. He has
apparently not, however, discovered dictionary.com. "In the design of ...
software tools, 'the fascist alternative' is the most restrictive and
structured way of capturing a particular function;"