On Fri, 16 Mar 2001 10:36:31 PST, Karyn Ulriksen said:
Search Engine requires a key certificate style license embeded in the html or website (whether it's internet centralized or just for the
And the key came from *where*? And this would be different from the current hassles of getting a PKI certificate *how*?
search engine). A "rating" and "type" is associated with the license for the type of site it is. As the search engine crawls the site, if the license is gone... it doesn't get listed. If the type and rating doesn't
Woo woo.. So I have to fork over $$$ to a company to publish stuff on the web? Or is this license "for free" - in which case it's probably worth what you paid for it?
match the information associated with the license data... it doesn't get
OK.. A .JPG of a man and a giraffe would probably be acceptable for all ratings. A .JPG of a man and a giraffe having sex would probably NOT be acceptable. How did you tell the difference?
listed. If the license certificate doesn't match the IP(s) associated with the certificate... it doesn't get listed. Has anybody tried something like
Great. I relocate my server to a new co-lo and I drop off the search engines unless I fork out new money for a new license. And if you don't think this won't happen, I'll point you at all the companies that we currently license software from who are *always* ready at the drop of a hat to ship us a new license for a machine "because the CPU planar died and was replaced so the hostid is now different". Yeah. We *never* have a problem getting new licenses. ;)
this before?
Umm.. there's PICS and other web rating systems already extant. They've worked wonders, haven't they? Valdis Kletnieks Operating Systems Analyst Virginia Tech