Another bad thing regarding this service, is that it gives a higher priority to lists which get better and more grades, and it asks the list owner to bring the list members to vote. This means that a list owner that will urge his members to visit this list will be more apparent in searches than a list owner who does not. At the moment they are asking for permission in order to archive, but some web search engines do archive mailing lists archives, and this is what mainly bothers me, since those do not really archive the list, but rather index it, making members lose their semi-privacy which they had in the list and furthermore expose them to spams spiders. Although at the moment my list is not yet archived in any web search engine, Once it is, it will change a lot. One thing that it worth to learn from one of those archives (Listquest mailing list's archive which also asks for permission in order to archive), is the fact that the e-mail addresses in the archive are in "gif" (or perhaps jpg, I don't remember) format, giving a good defence against spamming spiders. I hope that one day the archives of LISTSERV will use a similar antispamming trick. Uzi On 25 Apr 2000, at 13:55, Lanny Pierce <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > Well, it seems that there are other concerns out there grabbing mailing > lists and putting them up on a web site, a la Remarq. > > I just received this email a few minutes ago, and am going to go and see > what this is all about. I thought, though, that I should at least pass this > along to forewarn you. > > Take care everyone. > > Lanny Pierce (MagiCAT) > Administrator > Cat Chat > [log in to unmask] > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: <[log in to unmask]> > To: <[log in to unmask]> > Sent: Tuesday, April 25, 2000 1:06 PM > Subject: Your link has been added