- From: H&kon W Lie <howcome@w3.org>
- Date: Sat, 29 Apr 1995 00:08:09 --100
- To: wtrefzge@dtic.dla.mil
- Cc: www-talk@w3.org
Bill Trefzger writes: > I connected to Netscape's server to see if this was true (or documented). > It is both (http://home.netscape.com/assist/net_sites/dynamic_docs.html). > In the words of the documentation: "the content creator has total control". I'm happy see the list's reaction to the described fuctionality which leaves too much control to the content creator. In the style sheet discussions at the WWW conference in Darmstadt we were faced with a similar issue. Several people argued that the content provider should have the last word when deciding how to present a document. lee@sq.com writes: > At the WWW conference in Darmstadt, there was a short session in the > Developer's Day about style sheets. > > One thing that came out is that there may be situations where the author must > be able to override the user's style sheet preferences -- e.g. for legal > liability reasons. Just as "legal liability reasons" are being used to take the control away from the reader in issues of style, they can also be used to defend the unwanted client pull mechanism. I'm not too scared about reading or hearing legal statements, but the fuctionality will be too tempting for advertisers. Let's put the legal disclaimers in the HTML3 banner area (http://www.hpl.hp.co.uk/people/dsr/html/banners.html) and make sure the reader has control of the rest. -h&kon Hakon W Lie, WWW project CERN, CH-1211 Geneva 23 http://www.w3.org/hypertext/WWW/People/howcome/
Received on Friday, 28 April 1995 18:10:41 UTC