From: “Richard Martin” <rmartin@aw.sgi.com>
To: Richard Charles Graves <llurch@networking.stanford.edu>
Message Hash: 6c27c7bfd01d86609816a07860e8d3dac9b5d65f1e816f82346f70786acab225
Message ID: <9512061547.ZM8340@glacius.alias.com>
Reply To: <199512061957.LAA05418@Networking.Stanford.EDU>
UTC Datetime: 1995-12-06 20:46:51 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 6 Dec 95 12:46:51 PST
From: "Richard Martin" <rmartin@aw.sgi.com>
Date: Wed, 6 Dec 95 12:46:51 PST
To: Richard Charles Graves <llurch@networking.stanford.edu>
Subject: Re: Note on "Barring Netscape"
In-Reply-To: <199512061957.LAA05418@Networking.Stanford.EDU>
Message-ID: <9512061547.ZM8340@glacius.alias.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
On Dec 6, 11:57am, Richard Charles Graves wrote:
> The Microsoft Internet Explorer sends the user-agent "Mozilla 1.22
(compatible"
> to hte server, which triggers an incorrect response from, e.g., www.c2.org.
> This little fraud has the potential to make you look silly if left
unexplained.
this *is* fraud, in a way. Microsoft is shipping a product which in a
certain exchange claims to be a product of another company. Microsoft's
software is being treated better around the net because it is recognised
as Netscape, which it isn't.
It would be somewhat like me walking through the short line at Heathrow
as a EU citizen even though I'm actually a Canadian citizen.
If Microsoft had used "MSIE 1.0 (...)", then they would have to gain
"market share" in convincing the web that their browser is worth writing
content for. As a side note, there are suggestions that httpds should be
a little more intelligent about HTML, recognising which clients can handle
which versions of html [so that they would ship 1.0 to those which can
handle 1.0, 2.0 to those which think they can handle 2.0, and perhaps we
have a 2.0-netscape-ENHANCED-ha-ha-ha]. If this were to be encouraged by
both httpd creators and client creators, with both sides being honest,
then uSoft would not need to claim to be shipping Netscape. They could
just say html-2.0-microsoft-ENHANCED-ow-my-sides [e.g.] and servers could
check the 2.0 and pay attention to the rest if they wished. [On a side
note, if all governments decided to close up shop tomorrow, many people
on this list would be happy. Which is more likely?]
http, from my meagre understanding, is supposed to be a negotiation (among
other things) with both sides agreeing on what the client can handle and
what the server can offer. Perhaps Microsoft could be encouraged to be
honest about what they are shipping. (I don't doubt that other clients
may also lie about who they are.)
richard
ps - Life might be a lot easier for everyone on the web if Netscape forced
uSoft software to be honest about what it is.
ObBarelyCrypto: Do our *browsers* now have to start authenticating themselves?
- --
Richard Martin I DON'T SPEAK FOR ALIAS|WAVEFRONT
Alias|Wavefront - Toronto Office [Co-op Software Developer, Games Team]
rmartin@aw.sgi.com/g4frodo@cdf.toronto.edu http://www.io.org/~samwise
Trinity College UofT ChemPhysCompSci 9T7+PEY=9T8 Shad Valley Waterloo 1992
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: 2.6.2
iQCVAwUBMMYBVB1gtCYLvIJ1AQEi3gP+IqWbKqk6MTKviGMRw5ZKde+9BQ/iQOIA
jrrDXEZQIdwHBeeATOzqYFVzVxi5bQFgLPCt/kNTsyARwQbLGQ54HuR57qPX4EOm
d0d2A7oL4qsFwGvmETP4HlBQy10e5vKqM/7pLZl0s9cE/a3kWeZq+XCS4oBKHDtF
alTjxYClsAg=
=hOc9
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Return to December 1995
Return to ““Richard Martin” <rmartin@aw.sgi.com>”