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Author Message
13 new of 184 responses total.
bhelliom
response 172 of 184: Mark Unseen   Sep 12 17:26 UTC 2002

resp:165 - Believe I'm not paying attention, Sapna, if that makes you 
happy.

#171 wasn't actually meant for resp:165, not resp:170.
mynxcat
response 173 of 184: Mark Unseen   Sep 12 17:31 UTC 2002

This response has been erased.

mynxcat
response 174 of 184: Mark Unseen   Sep 12 17:32 UTC 2002

Couldn't come up with a better explanation?
polytarp
response 175 of 184: Mark Unseen   Sep 12 21:28 UTC 2002

THRASHHHH                            LIBRAARIES!


FUCKING COMMIES!
aruba
response 176 of 184: Mark Unseen   Sep 13 02:09 UTC 2002

Re #170: Read the other item, them, if you're interested in how the policy
got to be what it is.
aruba
response 177 of 184: Mark Unseen   Sep 13 02:10 UTC 2002

Re #169:  Dan, if you're worried about Jamie's brain falling out of his
head, I think you are wrrying too much.
cross
response 178 of 184: Mark Unseen   Sep 13 18:34 UTC 2002

Regarding #177; Well, I was more worried about *my* brain falling out of
my head; quantum effects are kind of scary, eh?  :-)

aruba
response 179 of 184: Mark Unseen   Sep 13 22:37 UTC 2002

Still, I think you should just have a beer.
cross
response 180 of 184: Mark Unseen   Sep 15 18:45 UTC 2002

Only if it's a Yuengling.
aruba
response 181 of 184: Mark Unseen   Sep 15 20:40 UTC 2002

Sure.  I'll join you.
cross
response 182 of 184: Mark Unseen   Sep 15 22:15 UTC 2002

Sounds great.  Let me know the next time you're in New York.  :-)
devnull
response 183 of 184: Mark Unseen   Oct 2 17:19 UTC 2002

While you might tell the police that you haven't verified an ID, and thus
you can't be certain of its accuracy, can the police necessarily be trusted
to treat it as if it might be inaccurate?  I've certainly heard enough
claims of police fabricating evidence that this bothers me.

And the stolen school ID case that Marcus mentions is an interesting one;
what would have happened if that ID had actually been copied, rather than
the original sent?

I think a check provides a reasonable level of verification, in that if
someone writes a forged check against my account, I will probably notice
and say something to my bank.  Knowing where an ID has traveled might be
a bit harder.

I do find myself wondering if providing a phone number and having the treasurer
call that number might be more effective verification.  Yes, it would cost
something, but it would cost less than $1 to verify each member, at least
in the US, I would expect.  Or, perhaps do both phoning and getting ID.

As for storing the data: I don't have any problem with trusting aruba to not
do anything dishonest, but it's a little bit harder to feel confident that
his computer hasn't been compromised by some sort of malicous software.
And encryption doesn't provide any protection against keystroke recording
software, really.  (Well, it might raise the bar far enough to make some
attacks fail.)

aruba
response 184 of 184: Mark Unseen   Oct 2 19:06 UTC 2002

If I had received a copy of a school id instead of an actual id, I probably
wouldn't have worried about it.  It turned out that the person in question
was a vandal,though, and in response to that incident I have started
notifying staff by mail whenever I add a new member, in case the new member
is a known vandal.  In that case I might get suspicious enough to do
something else toward verifying that the ID came from the person it
identifies.
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