bol...@cylonHQ.com writes:
> On Tue, 11 Sep 2018 18:14:32 -0400
> Sam <
s...@email-scan.com> wrote:
> >> Where it came from doesn't matter,
> >
> >Let's ignore facts that are somewhat inconvenient, ok?
>
> Its origin doesn't matter. It exists, MIME is NOT required.
You still failed to wrap your brain around what "required" actually means.
And you still insist that someone around here stated that MIME is required
to post to Usenet… Well, when you find that someone, let me know, so I can
also set him/her/it straight.
> >> the fact is you don't need MIME in a usenet post which brings us back
> >> full circle.
> >
> >You also don't need a "Subject:" header either. Or a valid "From:" header
>
> Really? My NNTP server thinks otherwise:
>
> 441 Missing required From: header
> 441 Required Subject: header is missing
Your NNTP server is not an authoritative source of the NNTP specification.
Sorry to have confused you with facts. The current NNTP specification is RFC
3977. I'll wait until you find which part of it makes “From:” and “Subject:”
headers required for NNTP transport. Please make sure to mention the section
and paragraph number in your response. I'm really looking forward to it.
I'm going to try to teach you something, and we'll see if my efforts will go
for naught: just because a there's no requirement for something, unless it's
prohibited an individual implementation is allowed to implement it. NNTP
does not require a mandatory “From:“ or “Subject:“ header. This does not
prohibit individual NNTP servers from requiring it. Each NNTP server is free
to implement its own policies for transporting and distributing messages.
Just because your NNTP server requires them doesn't mean that every NNTP
server in the world does too, or that it's required by NNTP.
Do you always blather off on subject matter you have no clue about, or are
you just making a special exception, just for me? Just curious.
I have a sneaky feeling that we're just about to find out, in mere moments…
> Anything else you feel like getting wrong while you're at it? You've got
> quite
> a list of bloopers so far.
Are you auditioning for the role of the Black Knight, in the upcoming Monty
Python remake? For some reason I think that you have a pretty good chance of
landing the role.
> >either; none of which are required by NNTP. It seems that whatever point you
> >were trying to make by that: it's so profound, so mind-blowing, and so
> Earth-
> >shattering, that you are the only person in the world who actually knows
> >what it is.
>
> The point was pretty simple. Unfortunately it has proved completely beyond
> you
> to comprehend it.
It can't be simple. After all, if it were, you would be able to explain it.
Or cite an authoritative reference for this mysterious NNTP requirement of
whose existance you're absolutely sure of, but just can't find any evidence.
Must be some kind of a Vast Right Wing Conspiracy, to make you look like an
abject fool, right?
> >> Is that yankie for "Excuse me while I escape from this corner I've painted
> >> myself in to"?
> >
> >You misspelled "yankee". I wouldn't normally make a point of it, but you
> >seem to be quite particular and sensitive to spelling and proper grammar,
> >according to your prior scribbling.
>
> Its slang. It can be spelt however you want.
Unfortunately, the historical custom of this, very fine, newsgroup is that
we all must strive to always use King's English. Not slang. You can leave
that for Facebook.
> >> Woah, "ascii-armoured", thats a big impressive phrase! Armour! Tough and
> >> manly!
> >> No pussy encoding for you eh? LOL :)
> >
> >It's not my term. I am just a mere conveyance of accurate and truthful
>
> Its a term you didn't understand.
You're projecting. You seem to be impressed by the term “ASCII armor”. It's
as if you've never heard of it before. You reacted as if this was the first
time you've read someone using this term, and, once again, ass-umed that
it's just a personal term of mine.
It's not, grasshopper. You claim “thats [sic] a big impressive phrase”. You
even used an exclamation mark, to underscore your surprise at this curious
term, that you're so unfamiliar with.
Well, in fact, “--armor” is the literal, actual name of an actual gpg
command line option, Einstein, which requests this fascinating task to be
accomplished by gpg. Would you care for a link to online documentation?
Yes, indeed, you found “ASCII armor” to be a very unusual choice of words
for describing what you get by running the “gpg“ command using the “--armor“
option. That pretty much sums up your latest, self-hoisted petard.
This option existed for several decades now. I can't make this stuff up.
Just curious: have you ever wondered why so many people point their fingers
in your direction, and laugh? Have you even executed the gpg command, just
once, with any option? Do you know how to manage your public and private
keyrings, and do the usual kind of pgp-ish stuff? You obviously know nothing
about it, you don't know about the “--armor” option, but you think you have
the qualifications to discuss PGP signing of Internet messages. I guess
you'll just have to add one more failure, to your impressive resume of
flameouts.
This turns out to be a fairly common, standard term used in PGP technical
documentation, since the beginning; and the term is now commonly used in
general technical documentation also. Your unfamiliarity with it
accidentally reveals the fact that you were trying, valiantly, to discuss a
highly technical subject matter you don't know anything about. If you did
know anything about it, the term would not've been such a surprise, and you
would not've made an issue out of it. After all, the “--armor“ option is one
of the common ones, and in fact is the precise option that generates the PGP
signature which caused so much confusion on your part. But that's ok, by
making an issue out of it you've just underscored your own level of
dumbassetry.
But there's a bigger issue besides your fascination with this latest shining
ball, called “ASCII armor” (oooh!, big fancy words!); specifically your
general confusion about the fundamental difference between MIME base64
encoding and PGP ASCII Armoring; leading you to believe they're one and the
same just because both use the same alphabet. Unfortunately that's not the
case, and they serve fundamentally distinct purposes. Get back to me when
you've figured it out, and finally read the referenced application/pgp-
signature MIME type specification, that gives, pretty much, a verbatim
equivalent of the original snippet of the message that included the Ascii-
armored signature. Did you know that an option called “--armor” was used to
generate it?
If you still believe that you're looking at MIME base64 encoding, then maybe
you should write their authors and tell them they've got it wrong, and that
you know better.
Really, why haven't you, yet, reviewed the application/pgp-signature spec?
Can't find it? Too many long words, that your brain can't absorb? Or you did
read it, but are too ashamed to admit how full of crap you are? Which is the
case?
> >> "These encodings are necessary for transmission of data when the channel
> does
> >
> >> not allow binary data (such as email or NNTP) or is not 8-bit clean. PGP
> >> documentation (RFC 4880) uses the term ASCII armor for binary-to-text
> >> encoding
> >> when referring to Base64."
> >> ^^^^^^
> >
> >Congratulations for mastering the art of copying and pasting. I'm sure
> >you're very proud of your accomplishment, and you're expecting someone to
> >pat you on the head for it.
>
> Well since you're incapable of using google someone has to point you to some
> relevant material.
Maybe, maybe not. When you find that someone, let me know. Sounds like very
useful service, having someone else Google something for me, instead of
doing it myself. That must be what that "Google Assistant" gizmo, that I
keep hearing about in the news, is all about. Perhaps that Google Assistant
can help you find the application/pgp-signature MIME specification, so that
you can enlighten yourself.
Or, perhaps, your Google Assistant can help you find scores of articles
explaining what ASCII armoring is, since you've never heard of it before.
> >Unfortunately, your hyper-active cranial matter failed to note that the
> >content in question was explicitly identified as carrying a
> >
> >Content-Type: application/pgp-signature
>
> And?
It's something that called a "fact". You should invest a few minutes in
learning what that word means, and what application/pgp-signature's
specification says.
> Its still base64 encoded, something you denied.
It is not MIME base-64 encoded, you are simply incapable of understanding
the difference between PGP ASCII armoring, MIME content, and MIME content
transfer encoding. It's a very nuanced, but a very important, distinction. A
distinction you are clearly incapable of understanding. Too many big words…
Too many big concepts… I really can't understand why can't someone just
write a large coloring book, to help people like you understand these
complicated things? And even include a box of crayons, to make the whole
thing easier.
> Any other not-up-for-
> debate facts you wish to deny or are you done for the week?
Well, here's one "not-up-for-debate fact": you are a clueless dummy with a
severe case of delusion of self-grandeur, who thinks that he/she/it is hot
stuff because he/she/it can successfully compile helloworld.cpp in Visual
Studio. I am not going to deny that.
Grow up, young man/woman/non-gendered-entity (just doing my part to be
inclusive); you're in the adult world now, and what you think you know,
doesn't really amount to much. Which is why you must pay attention, and make
careful notes, when your mental superiors are schooling you. There is
slight, just a slight, chance that you might understand and learn something.
Which would be a step forward; but even if not, at least you've tried. But
you're not even trying. And that's a shame. All those helpless, innocent
electrons, being sacrificed on the altar of Usenet, just in order for your
shining paragon of ignorance to make it to every corner of the world, and
for everyone to laugh at it. Although we, mere mortals, certainly gain some
enjoyment, we can't ignore the utter waste of useful energy that was needed
to propagate such rubbish. Win some, lose some, I guess.
> [rest of tl;dr drivel snipped]
Oh, please. It's quite you've read every word of it. And loved it. Just like
you've read every word of this, and despite being embarrased at daring to
try to match wits with your mental superior, you found your experience to be
strangely to your liking.
> You can always tell when someones on the back foot when they post a mini
> dissertation to try and put their point across. Give it rest mate, honestly
> its just laughable.
Nope. Why would I give up on free entertainment?
And you call /that/ a dissertation? You really have low standards. Maybe it
would be a dissertation of a lifetime for you, but my record for a Usenet
flame racks up to about a 3000 line post, as I recall*. This, right here –
what you're reading right now – is nothing. Absolutely nothing, compared to
the flames of long ago, in a galaxy far-far away. You've yet to learn much,
young padawan.
*Of course, I had some, shall we say… technical assistance in writing it up.
But let this be our little secret, just between you and me. Nobody else
needs to know, and may the schwartz be with you.