>On Wed, Sep 24, 2003 at 03:13:57PM -0400, MightyE wrote: >> I agree, I don't think it's unreasonable to reject improperly formatted >> messages. > >> Take the low road >> catchall, and simply reject them as a matter of course. > >this runs counter to the maxim of Postel ><http://www.postel.org/postel.html>: > >"Be liberal in what you accept, and conservative in what you send." It depends how you interpret it. I'd interpret the rejection as being conservative on the sending side--leaving the data as is would violate _that_. I could see an argument for correcting malformed data where possible (e.g. cutting off all data after the first = sign), but that raises the question of how to know that you're transmitting the same content that the sender intended. Particularly in cases like this, where the standard is ambiguous, the only "safe" options with respect to preserving the content are to send the data on as is or reject it entirely, and in that case I think Postel's maxim would lean toward rejection; the "liberal" part is only for data you can accurately interpret. --Andrew Church achurch@achurch.org http://achurch.org/