OpenBCM V1.08-5-g2f4a (Linux)

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IZ3LSV

[San Dona' di P. JN]

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PE1BIV > SYSOP    30.12.14 10:05l 57 Lines 1944 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
BID : 76705_PE1BIV
Read: GUEST
Subj: Annoying; call@ve2pkt...
Path: IZ3LSV<F1OYP<F1OYP<JH4XSY<JE7YGF<7M3TJZ<CX2SA<ED1ZAC<GB7CIP<PE1BIV
Sent: 141229/2343z @:PE1BIV.#YMD.NLD.EURO JNOS #:76703 $:76705_PE1BIV

Hi all,

Is it just me who only has noticed that all bulletins that did pass 
VE2PKT are now having the orginator@ve2pkt as sender address while 
the bulletin has the original BID retained?
This because a blank line is being inserted in the headers between the 
BBS history.

This has been going on for months now, but I guess I'm now going to be 
the first to make VE2PKT aware of this issue.

I don't know any more if FBB ignores blank lines breaking up the headers, 
but JNOS doesn't. It does take the oldest R-line as thge originating 
BBS, and the oldest R-line is the one before a blank line separating 
the headers from the bulletin body.

BTW, the blank line is inserted in the R-lines before VE2PKT and then 
the BBS after VE2PKT, isolating all the R-lines of the BBS the bulletin 
has passed before VE2PKT.

I would say that it would be nice to see this issue disappear again.
I first noticed this in early August, and I think it now really has 
been long enough...


Best Regards, 73, Angela













--------------------------------------------------------------------------
PE1BIV *** [44.137.77.49] *** IJMUIDEN - NL *** JO22hl *** CM44h *** M1SCH
AX25: pe1biv@pe1biv.#ymd.nld.euro  ******  smtp: pe1biv_at_pe1biv.ampr.org
E-mail: pe1biv_at_gmail.com ************** Member from: IEEE, NADARS, PWGN
Packet Radio Homepage: http://http.pe1biv.ampr.org (Packet Radio) 
                     : http://www.pe1biv.net (Internet) 

I am opposed to my bulletins being placed on systems where these bulletins 
can be publicly accessed by anyone, including search engines and spambots, 
from the Internet, without that the user first has to logon to have access 
to the system!
Having Packet bulletins on display on so many systems, where the sysops 
think these bulletins are so important for the people outside of Amateur 
Radio that they need to have access to them, quite often indefinitely, is 
just ridiculous Internet polution!




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