Perry E. Metzger writes:
Pardon.
Eric has more or less total control over the mailing list. The control is imperfect -- I could, for instance, blow up the machine.
You claim this imperfection is reason to consider it to be "community property" or some such.
Not at all. I'm making no positive claim: I just do not see any particular reason to consider the list Eric's. Perhaps you should clarify what you mean by "the list": do you mean the set of bits that describe the mailing addresses of every person on the list or do you simply mean the instance of majordomo running on toad.com with the previous bit stream loaded? I'm thinking of the former as being "the list" and thus squarely in the realm of intellectual property and all the snags that entails. If it's the latter you're referring to, sure, we can call it "Eric's." But so what? That and a subway token will get you to Brooklyn. My main point, which you keep dropping off, is that the instantiation of the set of mailing addresses at a particular site is a relatively minor factor in the continuity of a mailing list. -- Todd