cellio: (avatar)
[personal profile] cellio
I just sent mail to the administrator of the Reform movement's mailing lists asking him to stick to the standard. :-)



Dear [name],

Thank you for your reply.

> There is no text only version currently available for [list].
> We may pursue this in the near future.

I would like to encourage you to provide this for all of your mailing lists. While of course any service provider is free to support or reject any formats he chooses, the internet community as a whole works better when standards are followed. So far as I know nothing has superseded RFC 822, which calls for email to be sent in plain text. This specifies a minimum, and many modern mail programs also support HTML. However, older mail programs do *not* support HTML well, and even when the mailer itself does, text archives are rendered unreadable if they are not in plain text.

The result of this for me is that while I can mostly read the messages, I cannot usefully save them or pass them on to other interested members of my congregation. Perhaps this is your intent -- that the mailing lists be ephemereal and that people have to subscribe directly. That wouldn't have been my guess, however.

Thank you for your time in considering this matter.

mmm, pedantry

Date: 2003-11-30 08:42 pm (UTC)
geekosaur: orange tabby with head canted 90 degrees, giving impression of "maybe it'll make more sense if I look at it this way?" (Default)
From: [personal profile] geekosaur
RFC2822 superceded it, actually. And MIME is a full standard... but last I checked it was still recommended that non-text mail use multipart/alternative and include a plain-text version. Not that that helps e.g. web archives that tend to mishandle HTML email in various odd ways (HTML lacks a simple method to reliably embed one HTML document into another).

Re: mmm, pedantry

Date: 2003-11-30 09:03 pm (UTC)
geekosaur: orange tabby with head canted 90 degrees, giving impression of "maybe it'll make more sense if I look at it this way?" (Default)
From: [personal profile] geekosaur
You need to know how they describe things; the RFCs in question don't say "mail format", they say "message format". :)

RFC 2822 - Internet Message Format
Network Working Group                                 P. Resnick, Editor
Request for Comments: 2822                         QUALCOMM Incorporated
Obsoletes: 822                                                April 2001
Category: Standards Track


And while it does indeed restrict itself to plain text, as RFC822 did, it specifically refers to the MIME RFCs [RFC2045, RFC2046, RFC2049] for transmission of non-text data.

(And, pedantic self-correction: RFC822/STD11 is still the official standard; RFC2822 is still pending. Not to mention that I butchered "supersedes" yet again. :/)

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