- From: Yaron Goland <yarong@Exchange.Microsoft.com>
- Date: Thu, 10 Feb 2000 23:41:56 -0800
- To: "'w3c-dist-auth@w3.org'" <w3c-dist-auth@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <7DE119D3D0E15543874F7561EECBDBED0261A160@BEG.platinum.corp.microsoft.com>
The first sentence of the second paragraph of section 4 reads: "A redirect reference resource never automatically forwards requests to its target resource." I believe that the word "automatically" is misleading in that it implies that if one sends the right header or body the redirect resource might actually forward the request for you. In addition this sentence runs afoul of Yaron.Redirect.Forwarding. As such I move that this sentence be changed to read "A redirect resource blindly issues 302 (Found) redirect responses point at its target resource." The second sentence of the same paragraph reads: "It is this characteristic that distinguishes redirect reference resource from direct reference resources and from bindings." The removal of this sentence, consistent with Yaron.Redirect.NoReferenceorDirectResource, would remove the only reference to direct reference resources outside of the terminology section. Therefore I move that this entire sentence be removed from the draft. The last two sentences of the same paragraph read: "It is also what insures that redirect reference resources will be simple to implement and that cross-server references will be possible. If the redirect reference resource were required to forward requests automatically, the server would need proxy capabilities in order to support cross-server references." I found the language confusing and it violated Yaron.Redirect.Servers. Therefore I move that the language be altered to read: "Redirect resources bring the same benefits as links in HTML documents. They can be created and maintained without the involvement or even knowledge of their target resource. This reduces the cost of linking between resources."
Received on Friday, 11 February 2000 02:42:15 UTC