I'm not sure about pasting in reply fields to override behavrior. That dependes on precedence between "From:" and "Reply-To:", etc. Basically, I'm not real familiar with the appropriate RFC :-)
In short, if there's a Reply-To: field present, the mailer is supposed to reply to that address. Some mailers don't, unfortunately. Some reply to the From: line in the mail, and some reply to the out of band sender information, usually seen in the "From " line at the top of the mail. Let's face it, header pasting is a hack. A very nice hack, in certain ways, but still a hack. As currently implemented, header pasting, be it incoming (::) or outgoing (##), is a syntactic operator, not a semantic one. The relevant RFC is 822, "STANDARD FOR THE FORMAT OF ARPA INTERNET TEXT MESSAGES". This RFC has several holes in it, however. The syntactic structure of the header fields indicates that the only fields which may appear multiple times are receiver fields (To, cc, bcc, and the Resent-* version of these), Received, and the optional fields. (I avoid a too-long discussion of the Resent-* fields, whose description seems to contradict this definition.) Therefore, it is possible to make syntactically counter-spec mail using header pasting. It is also possible to make such counter-spec mail in emacs mail mode, for example, but it doesn't seem to bother anybody much. Yet RFC-822 is followed as much in the breach as in the observance. In particular, 822 seems to specify that the recipient of the mail be contained in one of the destination fields. Yet sendmail takes parameters on the command line for the destination and ignores the To: field inside the message. Now there is a flag for sendmail to parse the mail and determine addresses, but this is not the default, much less required. I think this behavior of sendmail is good, but it does appear to be counter to the semantic interpretation of the destination fields as specified in 822. My own philosophy on this is that one should never flagrantly violate 822 syntactically, and to take it semantically with a grain of salt. What are the implications for header pasting? I think it ought to remain only syntactic, since the semantics that would need to be defined do not have a solid base in specification, much less in implementation. Yet this pasting does not allow 'overriding' of an existing header field. One could write an operator that removes header fields in the context of header pasting. In the current remailer situation, this operator would allow one to remove the "From:" field and substitute another--instant in-band forgery. Whether the operators of remailers want to do this is left for discussion. Eric