:)  Keep the suggestions coming; we do try to get things in, and we're
getting better at being creative.  We also love the feedback!

I know it's hard to handle legacy things; I'll work on rewording the text of
the email - hopefully we can make it explicit that this particular
"password" is temporary information, only required for the explicit purpose
of completing the transfer.

Please, keep the suggestions coming ([EMAIL PROTECTED])

Charles Daminato
OpenSRS Product Manager
Tucows Inc. - [EMAIL PROTECTED]

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Robert L Mathews
> Sent: February 5, 2002 4:56 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: RE: Transfer confirmation "password" terminology is confusing
>
>
> At 2/5/02 1:15 PM, Charles Daminato wrote:
>
> >Consider a reseller that has many domain properties across several
> >registrars.
> >
> >Or a company that's been in business for long enough to have their
> >information in the Admin section because that's how they operate their
> >business, handling all end user actions on the domain (trademark
> firms come
> >to mind).
> >
> >Just something we have to keep in mind before altering things
> (every time we
> >change one bit or byte on one message, it breaks someone -
> painfully funny
> >sometimes)
>
> Hmmm, okay. In general, you're absolutely right, but I'd consider it
> extremely unlikely that anyone has set up a script to automate the
> handling of that particular message. However, you're the one who would
> have to listen to the complaints if I was wrong.
>
> It would seriously suck if flaws like this are going to be in the OpenSRS
> system forever because people are afraid to change anything. I hate to
> whine (always a bad start to a sentence), but I really have stopped
> bothering to suggest medium or large improvements to OpenSRS because they
> never actually happen due to one obstacle or another. I thought maybe a
> tiny but useful improvement could happen. <sigh>
>
> --
> Robert L Mathews, Tiger Technologies
>
> "The trouble with doing something right the first time is that nobody
> appreciates how difficult it was."
>

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