Because of the confusion between 'bug' and 'virus', the UK government
wishes all prominent WWW sites to be Y2K-compliant (presumably they think
the 'bug' can be spread over the WWW?) and this includes XML-DEV. As XMLers
will obviously know, identification of dates in pre-XML documents is almost
impossible, but random checks will be made by robots from uk.gov on WWW
sites. They are particularly concerned with mailing lists.
We have therefore been asked to make XML-DEV Y2K compliant. The primary
concern - mail headers - will be dealt with centrally, but it *does* affect
those of you who include dates in your messages. The most common problem is
when quoting someone else's mail - this often gives time and date.
Unfortunately a few mailers use only 2 digits, so:
PLEASE MAKE SURE THAT ALL DATES IN YOUR POSTINGS ARE EDITED TO HAVE DATES
OF THE FORM 1998 (changing to 2000 when appropriate).
Since the robots are unlikely to have sophisticated heuristics (they
probably use a regex of the form [^9]98) it would be helpful if you could
also avoid using the digits '98' in your text. [This is unlikely, but could
occur in examples.]
P.
1998-04-01
Peter Murray-Rust, Director Virtual School of Molecular Sciences, domestic
net connection
VSMS http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/vsms, Virtual Hyperglossary
http://www.venus.co.uk/vhg