You seem to think only about web server vendors. There are a number of
other HTTP implementations, in particular for embedding in devices (such as
printers) that are counting every bit they put in.
Carl-Uno
At 02:11 PM 11/6/97 PST, Turner, Randy wrote:
>
>
>Let me emphasize the word "de facto", because I can't think of any HTTP
>server shipping today that doesn't support HTTPS (Netscape Enterprise
>Server, Microsoft IIS, Apache). The question was whether or not there is
>some requirement, and there is no STANDARD requirement that HTTP servers
>support
>SSL3, but there is a very strong MARKET requirement for this type of
>support.
>
>Randy
>
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Larry Masinter [SMTP:masinter@parc.xerox.com]
>> Sent: Thursday, November 06, 1997 2:07 PM
>> To: Randy Turner
>> Cc: Harry Lewis; ipp@pwg.org
>> Subject: Re: IPP> Use of SSL3 Framing????
>>
>> > They are required by de facto, not by a pure standard, to support
>> HTTPS
>> > because no commercial vendor of HTTP servers would introduce a
>> server
>> > incapable of providing the capability for internet commerce.
>>
>> This is utterly false. Not all HTTP servers are required to support
>> Internet
>> commerce.
>> --
>> http://www.parc.xerox.com/masinter
>
>
Carl-Uno Manros
Principal Engineer - Advanced Printing Standards - Xerox Corporation
701 S. Aviation Blvd., El Segundo, CA, M/S: ESAE-231
Phone +1-310-333 8273, Fax +1-310-333 5514
Email: manros@cp10.es.xerox.com