- From: Peter Deutsch <peterd@bunyip.com>
- Date: Wed, 21 Jun 1995 12:29:00 -0400
- To: bede@scotty.mitre.org, www-talk@www10.w3.org
[ You wrote: ] . . . } Most, if not all, of the free sexy Internet stuff (digitized images, } mostly, it seems) causing some frantic pre-election-year posturing in } the U.S. Congress will probably no longer be free, or even cheap, I'm absolutely convinced that commercial quality information is coming, but I seriously doubt that it will _replace_ that which is on the net today. Rather, we can expect it to complement the many free offerings. After all, nobody is paying for most of what is out there right now yet many, many people continue to put up their offerings and they do so for a variety of non-monetary rewards. This is a fundamental part of the attraction of the net and I expect it will continue to be so. On the net, everyone's a publisher... . . . } Getting back to the thread, though, I'll have to vote for an HTTP } header for rating information (to support "KidCode" or whatever) The problem with this approach, as you point out, is that it provides nothing more than hints and thus wont work in all cases (after all, there are people that can't/wont rate their offerings for whatever reason). Because censors will still have to do other forms of client side filtering anyways, and because these hints don't provide any benefit to the rater, I don't see this proposal serving any real purpose except to show people who are hot under the collar right now that we're doing "something". It might be nice to have the hint, but I don't see it as becoming widely used. After all, what is my incentive to me to provide these hints? I'm based in Canada, and unless the U.S. plans an invasion some time soon (something we of course can't rule out... ;-) I'm outside your jurisdiction right now... - peterd -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ...there is reason to hope that the machines will use us kindly, for their existance will be in a great measure dependent on ours; they will rule us with a rod of iron, but they will not eat us... - Samuel Butler, 1872 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Received on Thursday, 22 June 1995 02:43:53 UTC