and yet let me disagree
who owns the IDs in all social networks and messengers? is it a user? no, it's the owner of the social network.
take this identifier from you and you are Mr./Ms. nobody
they can pick it up because you "violated" the policies of social networks and messengers
is such an event real? is quite real.
the situation is different with DNS and email
yes, in DNS you are not the "owner" of the domain name, only the "holder" of the domain name, but no one can take it from you
what are the risks when you'll associate, for example, your trademarks with identifiers in social networks and messengers?
these are only two aspects? one more related to security issues
it is true that millennials prefer messengers, but business culture does not in any way imply an official exchange of information via messengers, unofficial - yes
messengers and social networks for personal communication - yes, but the fixation of significant business and social acts is not yet available
Yuri
Wednesday, July 29, 2020, 5:28:58 AM, you wrote:
> On 28 Jul 2020, at 19:52, Jim DeLaHunt wrote:
>> UA Colleagues:
>> We spend a lot of time thinking about universal acceptance of email
>> addresses and URLs. We tend to assume that email addresses and URLs
>> are important. But for a lot of information technology users, they
>> aren't. Those users learned to use IT via mobile, rather than via
>> desktop computers. They use all-embracing messaging apps like WeChat,
>> or walled garden social media sites where you find what you want by
>> search. In these environments, email addresses and URLs just don't
>> matter as much as they do in longer-established, and Anglo-centric, IT
>> cultures.
> « I know ». Email address for my grown-up teen-agers has been a
> temporary ID to subscribe to a service on the Internet. They verify your
> email by sending a challenge to your email address. You click. done. no
> use of email after. Then went Oauth enabling login using your
> google/facebook/… credentials where the browser even help you to type
> your userid. Therefore, for my kids, email does not really exist. About
> URL, URLs were not designed to be readable by users, but just a link to
> click on.
> Marc.
>> Here are an interesting blog post and an interesting news article on
>> the topic:
>> /In China, email addresses are irrelevant/ • July 28, 2020 by John
>> Yunker, blog post
>> <https://globalbydesign.com/2020/07/28/in-china-email-addresses-are-irrelevant/>
>> /Why email loses out to popular apps in Chin//a/ • 9th July 2020 by
>> Lu-Hai Liang, BBC
>> <https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20200707-why-email-loses-out-to-popular-apps-in-china>
>> I think a useful response to this might be to keep asking ourselves,
>> how do people communicate in preference to emails? How do people find
>> things in preference to typing in URLs? Then investigating those
>> methods for Universal Acceptance as well.
>> 'In Anglo-centric countries such as the UK, US, Canada, Australia and
>> New Zealand, email retains the etiquette of an analogue age. The
>> “Dear X” greetings and formal sign-offs – “Best regards” –
>> and so on, reveal vestigial ties to letter writing.'
>> As I do in this email message. Best regards,
>> —Jim DeLaHunt, software engineer, Vancouver, Canada
>> --
>> . --Jim DeLaHunt, jdlh@jdlh.com http://blog.jdlh.com/
>> (http://jdlh.com/)
>> multilingual websites consultant
>> 355-1027 Davie St, Vancouver BC V6E 4L2, Canada
>> Canada mobile +1-604-376-8953
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--
З повагою,
Ю. Каргаполов mailto:yvk@uanic.net
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