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<u>some customers want opaque content and will not pay for complex content unless they have some reasonable protection against theft by view source.</u>
I didn't touch on this, in truth, because it strikes me as completely lame. I believe you, Len, when say there are people (well, let's be clear, you mean *corporations*) who want such a thing. I for one simply have no interest in that usage of the Web. And, I suggest, the W3C shouldn't get into that business.
As I said, subsets of subsets of various industries are free to define and abide by whatever 'standards' they care to create; what that has to do with the W3C's brief still escapes me.
Thanks for responding, though -- gee, call the W3C a bunch of cultish nutters, as I did last time, and no one says a word. But suggest that the binary-fetishists should steer clear of the W3C (and that it should steer clear of them) and the sharp knives come out! :>
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