From: Robert F. <ro...@27...> - 2008-06-18 19:30:10
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Hi Gilbert I just added this person as a developer if he still needs it. You are correct though about the permanent nature of internet activity, it's almost impossible to remove the traces. I wouldn't add him as a admin, I didn't even know I was one. Eight years is a long time since working on, and it's got to be a few years since I last looked at this mailing list. Robert On Fri, May 16, 2008 at 03:01:58PM -0400, Gilbert Carl Herschberger II wrote: > A former member of the JOS Project has requested to become an > administrator of the JOS Project--in order to remove his personal > information from HTML pages and Java source code. So far, I have done > what I can to remove his personal information on his behalf. > > It does not make sense to me to grant administrator access to someone > who has left the project. > > I am but one administrator of the JOS Project at sourceforge.net. I > am not going to grant administrator privileges to another person, no > matter how insistent they might be. > > We have very limited capability to remove personal information from > mailing list archives. We have no known capability of removing > personal information from RPMs which have already been distributed. > We "remove" information by publishing a new release of an RPM. > > The jos-general list itself is archived. Everything sent to the list > is a "permantent" record. How do we remove information that was > unintended to be part of the mailing list archive? I do not know. > > How should we handle this matter? > > Thanks, > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.net email is sponsored by: Microsoft > Defy all challenges. Microsoft(R) Visual Studio 2008. > http://clk.atdmt.com/MRT/go/vse0120000070mrt/direct/01/ > _______________________________________________ > jos-general mailing list > jos...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jos-general |