PRIVACY: X-No-Archive and mail.cypherpunks

Hi, This is primarily addressed to the person who supports cypherpunks mail-to-news gateway. If you know who such person is, please send his/her address to me. Dear gateway maintainer, Please modify your reposting program so that it does not remove the X-No-Archive: yes header line from email messages. This particular header line is an indication to USENET search engines that the author of the message would not like it to be stored in these engines. It preserves the author's privacy and enforces the copyright protection. I am opposed to seeing my articles showing up in DejaNews and other search engines. All my emails and usenet postings have this header line. However, when cypherpunks-to-newsgroup gateway reposts all articles, it strips this header line. I believe it to be a mistake and hope that it will be corrected. Thank you. - Igor.

At 10:15 AM -0600 12/3/96, Igor Chudov @ home wrote:
This is primarily addressed to the person who supports cypherpunks mail-to-news gateway. If you know who such person is, please send his/her address to me. .... I am opposed to seeing my articles showing up in DejaNews and other search engines. All my emails and usenet postings have this header line. However, when cypherpunks-to-newsgroup gateway reposts all articles, it strips this header line. I believe it to be a mistake and hope that it will be corrected.
Igor raises an important point. I believe he is misguided in his expectation that his public utterances in a forum containing at least 1200 readers (and probably more, through gateways, etc.) that he can limit uses of his posts. Any recipient of his public utterances may choose to quote them in other articles, forward them to friends, archive them on his own disks, etc. (The interesting issue of whether making a file accessible to a search engine spider, and hence making the material much more widely accessible, is unresolved in the courts at this time. I was involved in a forum for U.S. Copyright Office issues--a virtual electronic forum of law professors and such--and I brought this issue up several times...with little interest, I should add.) "Archive policy arbitrage" is much like "cancellation policy arbitrage": any site which honors "no archive" policies is likely to be in competition with sites or search spiders which ignore "no archive" requests. If the U.S. courts rule--someday--that a "no archive" tag is enforceable (how?), then this'll just shift the sites and spiders to other jurisdictions. In a free society it is impossible to control what people do with material given to them. The best means of protecting one's writings is not to distribute them. --Tim May Just say "No" to "Big Brother Inside" We got computers, we're tapping phone lines, I know that that ain't allowed. ---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---- Timothy C. May | Crypto Anarchy: encryption, digital money, tcmay@got.net 408-728-0152 | anonymous networks, digital pseudonyms, zero W.A.S.T.E.: Corralitos, CA | knowledge, reputations, information markets, Higher Power: 2^1398269 | black markets, collapse of governments. "National borders aren't even speed bumps on the information superhighway."

FYI, the search engines that honor an X-No-Archive header also tend to skip posts with X-No-Archive: yes as the first line of the body of the message. IMO this is preferable anyway, because it lets your readers know what you're doing. -rich

X-No-Archive: yes Rich Graves wrote:
FYI, the search engines that honor an X-No-Archive header also tend to skip posts with X-No-Archive: yes as the first line of the body of the message.
But it is so simple to modify the reposting program...
IMO this is preferable anyway, because it lets your readers know what you're doing.
To me, it is easier to define X-No-Archive: yes once and for all. - Igor.
participants (3)
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ichudov@algebra.com
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Rich Graves
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Timothy C. May