> Date: 2005-08-28 15:28 > From: Frank Ellermann <nobody@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Bruce Lilly wrote: > > > Part of the problem is UAs which suppress message header > > fields, caused by the proliferation of "noise" fields in the > > message header (initially SMTP "Mail-From", subsequently > > renamed "Received", and now including a large number of > > others). > > s/Received/Return-Path/ (or is this some pre-821 history ?) RFC 821's predecessor, RFC 788: The time stamp line and the return path line are formally defined as follows: <return-path-line> ::= "Return-Path:" <SP><reverse-path><CRLF> <time-stamp-line> ::= "Mail-From:" <SP> <stamp> <CRLF> <stamp> ::= [<ptcl>] <from-host> <this-host> <daytime> ... > Ordinary users are most probably not often interested in the > timespamp lines, and MUAs not showing them in their default > configuration are fine. Interesting typo; maybe the lines should in fact be referred to as "timespam". The problem with UAs suppressing header fields is that some of them suppress important fields which communicate information from the message originator to recipients (e.g. Reply-To). The SMTP precedent of modification of the message (header) content after leaving the originator has directly led to other modifications (List- fields and a plethora of X- fields) which in turn have led to the practice of suppressing display of fields. It's a tough problem for a UA author, as there is no way to automatically determine whether some new message header field is a new originator field (which should not be suppressed) or some transport noise (which should be suppressed). _______________________________________________ Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf