On 2008-09-11, Steven D'Aprano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Thu, 11 Sep 2008 15:25:57 +1000, Ben Finney wrote: > >>> > The bounce messages are sent to you because you sent the original. >>> >>> Wrong. I didn't send _any_ e-mail. Why should I get bounce messages? >> >> You asked for email to be sent,
No, I didn't. >> by sending a Usenet post to comp.lang.python. That's what a >> news-to-mail gateway does. ROTFL. That's like saying: you asked to be mugged by walking down a street where there was a mugger. That's what a mugger does. > I wasn't aware that comp.lang.python was a news-to-mail > gateway. How can one tell the difference between news groups > that use a news-to-mail gateway, and news groups that don't? One can't tell. > Posting to a public newsgroup is obviously giving consent to > forward that news posting to news clients. Given the ability > to opt-out with the X-No- Archive header, there may even be an > implied consent to allow archiving. But I don't believe there > is any such implied consent to format-shift news messages to > email. I certainly don't care if the articles I post are sent to anybody via any transport. I just don't like it being made to appear that I'm the one who sent them. I supposed I could break down and stop using my real e-mail address in the From: field. Or I could add some procmail rules to try to filter out the results of being joe-jobbed by the gateway. > In practice, I couldn't care less what format my news postings > are converted to, so long as it is invisible and transparent > to me. That's the issue: it's not invisible to you if you're getting bounce messages, out-of-office-replies, and other e-mail traffic generated by the fact the somebody is grabbing articles off Usenet and mailing them out as if it were you that sent them. > If somebody wants to build a > news-to-carved-in-giant-stone-tablets gateway, I don't care, > so long as I don't get giant stone tablets aren't dumped in > my front yard. > > Nor do I believe that by posting a news message I've > automatically consented to receive email messages. To imply > that the one implies the other is equivalent to arguing that > because I've written a letter to the editor of a newspaper, I > therefore must accept private correspondence from any person > or corporation that has a subscription to that newspaper. > > (In practice, I don't mind human-generated email messages, but > not automatic messages. If you can turn my munged email > address into a real email address, I probably won't mind you > emailing me. Don't abuse the privilege.) I don't mind receiving private e-mails from people who recieved the posting (either via Usenet or the gatewayed mailing list). If I did, I wouldn't use my real e-mail address. But, I don't want to receive machined generated trash or to be cc'd by people following up to the article. > "The bounce/ooo-reply is sent to the message author, not to > any intermediate host(s). After all, on that end, it's normal > email failure response -- notify the author of the message. It > doesn't matter that the original message was posted on a > Usenet newsgroup if that group is automatically relayed to > members of a mailing list." > > But that's wrong: it *shouldn't* be an normal email failure > response, because the message author is in no position to do > anything about it except to cease posting. That's a problem > with all mailing lists (that I know of). I know of other mailing lists aren't configured that way: the original author doesn't get bounce messages -- the sender of the bounced e-mail gets the bounce message. -- Grant Edwards grante Yow! Clear the laundromat!! at This whirl-o-matic just had visi.com a nuclear meltdown!! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list