[OS X TeX] "Hijacking" a thread
Alain Schremmer
schremmer.alain at gmail.com
Tue Nov 4 06:27:27 EST 2008
On Nov 4, 2008, at 2:04 AM, Christopher Menzel wrote:
> Joseph C. Slater wrote:
>> Seriously. Stop using this thread. Start a new one. Sent an email
>> to macosx-tex at email.esm.psu.edu to start one. I'll even start it
>> for you.
>
> Well, maybe I'm more clueless than most, but I didn't have even an
> inkling that Joseph Slater's curt message was targeting me until he
> made an example of me (and also falsely accused me of top-posting
> -- the ignominy!). On the off chance that others might be equally
> clueless, and as penance for my transgressions, let me use my
> breach of netiquette as a "teaching moment" instead of a mere
> object of scorn: To "hijack" a thread is to start what you *think*
> is a new thread by *replying* to a message in an existing thread
> and changing the Subject header instead of beginning a new message
> that you explicitly address to the list yourself. You might think
> (as I did) that these are two paths to the same end, but the
> problem is that, when you reply to a message in an existing thread,
> an identifier is preserved in your message (in the usually hidden
> "In-Reply-To" header) that points to the replied-to message, and
> this identifier is used by mail clients capable of subject
> threading (as most are) to reconstruct threads. Hence, if you try
> to start a new thread by replying to a message in an existing
> thread, even if you supply a new Subject header, you succeed only
> in super-gluing your completely irrelevant message, and all
> followups to that message, to the existing thread -- the thread has
> been hijacked. Note this also affects the list archives, as the In-
> Reply-To headers are used to construct threads for the archives as
> well.
>
> I hope that's helpful to some folks.
Guilty as charged. In fact, I am a repeat offender.
But why would an identifier be hidden?
Apologetic regards
--schremmer
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