
I don't care at all either... Communication is like that... you gotta consider the place where you are. Not that it should cause any big worries, 'couse once you are being sincere you can always explain yourself. And about politeness or something like that, the fact you had been unpolite, in a place people allows you to be so can never be taken badly... The unique harm you can get being unpolite is hurting the expectations of people that doesen't expect you to be so... in that case the error is yours... and is also no big thing...
But anyway, I can get along with any decision you take... =)
Now excuse me, 'couse I'm going to the chat room. Once the cameras are off I'm gonna take of my clothes and say dirty things... woooOoOwW... hehe
thank you, Iuri
On 11/3/05, Ted Gould <ted@...11...> wrote:
On Wed, 2005-11-02 at 15:47 -0800, Bryce Harrington wrote:
On Wed, Nov 02, 2005 at 04:45:30PM -0600, Bob Jamison wrote:
I only had trouble with the Orwellian practice that every word we ever type belongs to society, and that it will be Googlecached forever.
Kees had the suggestion of maybe doing an automatic deletion of logs older than 6-months. This is consistent with EFF's advice about limiting document retention, and would also address the concern that the commentary would be around forever.
While I think old logs may still have some use, from the comments in this thread it sounds like the value of a given day's log drops off fairly quickly, so ones older than 6 months may have dropped in usefulness enough that their loss would be a small cost.
While I don't really care that much about this issue, I'd say that lawyers always love not having data, but I'm not sure that is a good thing. When they're trying to make the PBS special "100 years of Inkscape" what will they use for our history? Yes, they'll have a holograph interview with Bryce talking about "the great Cairo change of 2006", but what defines our history?
I'd be for keeping the logs, I don't mind them being searchable either, but I don't care that much either way.
--Ted
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.1 (GNU/Linux)
iD8DBQBDaccaLE335pRPGp0RAmZZAKDpumPf6Y4uuRh+xNC/XQI2z209kQCeP3Sa C759V19lUfptDifmb7KA+hQ= =LqWE -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----