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With these facts in mind, some time ago I prepended this note to
the comp.lang.c FAQ list:
This article was last modified on xxx, and its travels may
have taken it far from its original home on Usenet. It may
now be out-of-date, particularly if you are looking at a
printed copy or one retrieved from a tertiary archive site or
CD-ROM. You can always obtain the most up-to-date copy by
anonymous ftp from sites ftp.eskimo.com, rtfm.mit.edu, or
ftp.uu.net (see questions 18.16 and 20.40), or by sending the
e-mail message "help" to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu . Since
this list is modified from time to time, its question numbers
may not match those in older or newer copies which are in
circulation; be careful when referring to FAQ list entries by
number alone.
This article was produced for free redistribution.
You should not need to pay anyone for a copy of it.
[Also, I need to say some kind of an inverse "welcome back" to
this list, which I just discovered that I somehow fell off of
last October and to which I have finally resubscribed.]
Steve Summit
scs@eskimo.com
--The Communications Decency Act within the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (U.S.) is an annoying, threatening, abusive, indecent, and obscene piece of legislation which attempts to ban annoying, threatening, abusive, indecent, or obscene communication.
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