Suprised - CMD-backspace in trash puts the file back.

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By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder 
(rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting 
CMD-backspace.

The file was restored (in this case to the desktop)!

I checked on the web and that's: normal.

I would have expected an error message (eg: "This is already deleted!").

I guess it makes a sort of sense, just never expected it.

-- 
"I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
  I said I didn't know."
                           -Samuel Clemens.
0
Reply alan.browne (3808) 4/27/2012 8:14:24 PM

In article <OfKdndcgUvu9YwfSnZ2dnUVZ_u8AAAAA@giganews.com>,
 Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:

> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder 
> (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting 
> CMD-backspace.
> 
> The file was restored (in this case to the desktop)!

Damn! It doesn't work in 10.5.8

That would be like the old CMD-Y we used to have in the ol' days.
-- 

.... do not cover a warm kettle or your stock may sour. -- Julia Child
0
Reply warren.oates (3772) 4/27/2012 8:34:30 PM


In article <OfKdndcgUvu9YwfSnZ2dnUVZ_u8AAAAA@giganews.com>, Alan Browne
<alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:

> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder 
> (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting 
> CMD-backspace.
> 
> The file was restored (in this case to the desktop)!
> 
> I checked on the web and that's: normal.
> 
> I would have expected an error message (eg: "This is already deleted!").
> 
> I guess it makes a sort of sense, just never expected it.

It would would make more sense if it actually deleted the selected
file(s), since being in the Trash isn't really deleted ... which is a
missing feature someone else was looking for last week.

Helpful Harry  :o)
0
Reply HelpfulHarry2 (409) 4/27/2012 10:21:27 PM

On 4/27/12   PDT 1:34 PM, Warren Oates wrote:
> In article<OfKdndcgUvu9YwfSnZ2dnUVZ_u8AAAAA@giganews.com>,
>   Alan Browne<alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca>  wrote:
>
>> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder
>> (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting
>> CMD-backspace.
>>
>> The file was restored (in this case to the desktop)!
>
> Damn! It doesn't work in 10.5.8
>
> That would be like the old CMD-Y we used to have in the ol' days.

Yes, have missed that from time to time. It's Cmd-Delete, though, not 
left arrow.
(We have no backspace button per se.)
0
Reply jpmcw (1928) 4/27/2012 10:55:22 PM

In article <jnf84p$13s$1@dont-email.me>,
John McWilliams  <jpmcw@comcast.net> wrote:
>On 4/27/12   PDT 1:34 PM, Warren Oates wrote:
>> In article<OfKdndcgUvu9YwfSnZ2dnUVZ_u8AAAAA@giganews.com>,
>>   Alan Browne<alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca>  wrote:
>>
>>> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder
>>> (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting
>>> CMD-backspace.
>>>
>>> The file was restored (in this case to the desktop)!
>>
>> Damn! It doesn't work in 10.5.8
>>
>> That would be like the old CMD-Y we used to have in the ol' days.
>
>Yes, have missed that from time to time. It's Cmd-Delete, though, not 
>left arrow.
>(We have no backspace button per se.)

In 10.7.3, neither seemto do anything.  Neither does CMD-Y.


-- 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
| Brian Gordon     -->briang@panix.com<--     brian dot gordon at cox dot net |
+ brianggordon@hotmail.com   Bass: Lexington "Main Street Harmonizers" chorus +
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0
Reply briang (32) 4/27/2012 11:06:39 PM

In article <OfKdndcgUvu9YwfSnZ2dnUVZ_u8AAAAA@giganews.com>,
 Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:

> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder 
> (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting 
> CMD-backspace.

You can also just choose the Finder Edit > Undo command or type 
Command-Z to restore the last file you moved, copied, or deleted.

-- 
Send responses to the relevant news group rather than email to me.
E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my very hungry SPAM
filter. Due to Google's refusal to prevent spammers from posting
messages through their servers, I often ignore posts from Google
Groups. Use a real news client if you want me to see your posts.

JR
0
Reply jollyroger (10526) 4/27/2012 11:14:54 PM

In article <jnf8pv$q4a$1@reader1.panix.com>,
 briang@panix.com (Brian Gordon) wrote:

> In article <jnf84p$13s$1@dont-email.me>,
> John McWilliams  <jpmcw@comcast.net> wrote:
> >On 4/27/12   PDT 1:34 PM, Warren Oates wrote:
> >> In article<OfKdndcgUvu9YwfSnZ2dnUVZ_u8AAAAA@giganews.com>,
> >>   Alan Browne<alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca>  wrote:
> >>
> >>> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder
> >>> (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting
> >>> CMD-backspace.
> >>>
> >>> The file was restored (in this case to the desktop)!
> >>
> >> Damn! It doesn't work in 10.5.8
> >>
> >> That would be like the old CMD-Y we used to have in the ol' days.
> >
> >Yes, have missed that from time to time. It's Cmd-Delete, though, not 
> >left arrow.
> >(We have no backspace button per se.)
> 
> In 10.7.3, neither seemto do anything.  Neither does CMD-Y.

You have to select an item in the Trash window before typing 
Command-Delete.

You can also just type Command-Z (Edit > Undo) to undo your last trash.

-- 
Send responses to the relevant news group rather than email to me.
E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my very hungry SPAM
filter. Due to Google's refusal to prevent spammers from posting
messages through their servers, I often ignore posts from Google
Groups. Use a real news client if you want me to see your posts.

JR
0
Reply jollyroger (10526) 4/27/2012 11:25:16 PM

In article <jollyroger-E3F47A.16251627042012@news.individual.net>,
Jolly Roger  <jollyroger@pobox.com> wrote:
>In article <jnf8pv$q4a$1@reader1.panix.com>,
> briang@panix.com (Brian Gordon) wrote:
>
>> In article <jnf84p$13s$1@dont-email.me>,
>> John McWilliams  <jpmcw@comcast.net> wrote:
>> >On 4/27/12   PDT 1:34 PM, Warren Oates wrote:
>> >> In article<OfKdndcgUvu9YwfSnZ2dnUVZ_u8AAAAA@giganews.com>,
>> >>   Alan Browne<alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca>  wrote:
>> >>
>> >>> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder
>> >>> (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting
>> >>> CMD-backspace.
>> >>>
>> >>> The file was restored (in this case to the desktop)!
>> >>
>> >> Damn! It doesn't work in 10.5.8
>> >>
>> >> That would be like the old CMD-Y we used to have in the ol' days.
>> >
>> >Yes, have missed that from time to time. It's Cmd-Delete, though, not 
>> >left arrow.
>> >(We have no backspace button per se.)
>> 
>> In 10.7.3, neither seemto do anything.  Neither does CMD-Y.
>
>You have to select an item in the Trash window before typing 
>Command-Delete.
>

That's one of the things I tried.  It didn't help :-(

-- 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
| Brian Gordon     -->briang@panix.com<--     brian dot gordon at cox dot net |
+ brianggordon@hotmail.com   Bass: Lexington "Main Street Harmonizers" chorus +
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0
Reply briang (32) 4/28/2012 12:32:45 AM

In article <jnfdrd$r4p$1@reader1.panix.com>,
 briang@panix.com (Brian Gordon) wrote:

> In article <jollyroger-E3F47A.16251627042012@news.individual.net>,
> Jolly Roger  <jollyroger@pobox.com> wrote:
> >In article <jnf8pv$q4a$1@reader1.panix.com>,
> > briang@panix.com (Brian Gordon) wrote:
> >
> >> In article <jnf84p$13s$1@dont-email.me>,
> >> John McWilliams  <jpmcw@comcast.net> wrote:
> >> >On 4/27/12   PDT 1:34 PM, Warren Oates wrote:
> >> >> In article<OfKdndcgUvu9YwfSnZ2dnUVZ_u8AAAAA@giganews.com>,
> >> >>   Alan Browne<alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca>  wrote:
> >> >>
> >> >>> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder
> >> >>> (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting
> >> >>> CMD-backspace.
> >> >>>
> >> >>> The file was restored (in this case to the desktop)!
> >> >>
> >> >> Damn! It doesn't work in 10.5.8
> >> >>
> >> >> That would be like the old CMD-Y we used to have in the ol' days.
> >> >
> >> >Yes, have missed that from time to time. It's Cmd-Delete, though, not 
> >> >left arrow.
> >> >(We have no backspace button per se.)
> >> 
> >> In 10.7.3, neither seemto do anything.  Neither does CMD-Y.
> >
> >You have to select an item in the Trash window before typing 
> >Command-Delete.
> >
> 
> That's one of the things I tried.  It didn't help :-(

Somehow I suspect you're not doing it correctly. It works fine here, and 
has one every Mac I've tried it on recently.

-- 
Send responses to the relevant news group rather than email to me.
E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my very hungry SPAM
filter. Due to Google's refusal to prevent spammers from posting
messages through their servers, I often ignore posts from Google
Groups. Use a real news client if you want me to see your posts.

JR
0
Reply jollyroger (10526) 4/28/2012 12:38:14 AM

In article <OfKdndcgUvu9YwfSnZ2dnUVZ_u8AAAAA@giganews.com>,
 Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:

> 
> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder 
> (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting 
> CMD-backspace.
> 
> The file was restored (in this case to the desktop)!
> 
> I checked on the web and that's: normal.
> 
> I would have expected an error message (eg: "This is already deleted!").
> 
> I guess it makes a sort of sense, just never expected it.

Command delete is how I often send things to file, so perhaps it is 
neat or sensible that doing it again activates the Put Back command.

The Put Back command can be activated between folders that do not 
include the Trash, the same key combo working. But only in the Trash, 
I think, does the Put Back command actually appear in a context menu, 
these context menus tend not to have key combo help.

-- 
dorayme
0
Reply dorayme (1989) 4/28/2012 2:03:18 AM

On 04-27-2012 19:14, Jolly Roger wrote:
> In article<OfKdndcgUvu9YwfSnZ2dnUVZ_u8AAAAA@giganews.com>,
>   Alan Browne<alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca>  wrote:
>
>> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder
>> (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting
>> CMD-backspace.
>
> You can also just choose the Finder Edit>  Undo command or type
> Command-Z to restore the last file you moved, copied, or deleted.

For reasons unknown to me, sometimes that doesn't work.

-- 
Wes Groleau

    “Would the prodigal have gone home if
     the elder brother was running the farm?”
                       — James Jordan

0
Reply news31 (6411) 4/28/2012 2:06:31 AM

In article <dorayme-0994EA.12031828042012@news.albasani.net>,
 dorayme <dorayme@optusnet.com.au> wrote:

> Command delete is how I often send things to file

to trash,

-- 
dorayme
0
Reply dorayme (1989) 4/28/2012 2:15:10 AM

In article <4f9b02d6$0$1580$c3e8da3$92d0a893@news.astraweb.com>,
 Warren Oates <warren.oates@gmail.com> wrote:

> > By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash 
> > folder (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and 
> > hitting CMD-backspace.
> > 
> > The file was restored (in this case to the desktop)!
> 
> Damn! It doesn't work in 10.5.8
> 
> That would be like the old CMD-Y we used to have in the ol' days.

Sorta;command-y also would put back any file dragged from a folder to the 
desktop.

-- 
Tea Party Patriots is to Patriotism as 
People's Democratic Republic is to Democracy.
0
Reply michelle14 (18424) 4/28/2012 2:46:45 AM

On 2012-04-27 18:21 , Helpful Harry wrote:
> In article<OfKdndcgUvu9YwfSnZ2dnUVZ_u8AAAAA@giganews.com>, Alan Browne
> <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca>  wrote:
>
>> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder
>> (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting
>> CMD-backspace.
>>
>> The file was restored (in this case to the desktop)!
>>
>> I checked on the web and that's: normal.
>>
>> I would have expected an error message (eg: "This is already deleted!").
>>
>> I guess it makes a sort of sense, just never expected it.
>
> It would would make more sense if it actually deleted the selected
> file(s), since being in the Trash isn't really deleted ... which is a
> missing feature someone else was looking for last week.

Maybe.  As is, it is sort of a toggle.

You can drag selected files from trash into the "shredder" widget in 
dashboard.  I do this for some files for privacy reasons.

The trash, as many pointed out, is not a special storage area, it is a 
recovery area that should regularly be purged.  I usually clear it by 
the end of the day.

-- 
"I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
  I said I didn't know."
                           -Samuel Clemens.
0
Reply alan.browne (3808) 4/28/2012 1:53:58 PM

On 2012-04-27 18:55 , John McWilliams wrote:
> On 4/27/12 PDT 1:34 PM, Warren Oates wrote:
>> In article<OfKdndcgUvu9YwfSnZ2dnUVZ_u8AAAAA@giganews.com>,
>> Alan Browne<alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:
>>
>>> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder
>>> (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting
>>> CMD-backspace.
>>>
>>> The file was restored (in this case to the desktop)!
>>
>> Damn! It doesn't work in 10.5.8
>>
>> That would be like the old CMD-Y we used to have in the ol' days.
>
> Yes, have missed that from time to time. It's Cmd-Delete, though, not
> left arrow.
> (We have no backspace button per se.)

True, apple keyboards that key is delete.

I'm using a Logitech keyboard which is "PC"-ish with Apple enhancements 
(CMD)

-- 
"I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
  I said I didn't know."
                           -Samuel Clemens.
0
Reply alan.browne (3808) 4/28/2012 1:56:20 PM

On 2012-04-27 19:14 , Jolly Roger wrote:
> In article<OfKdndcgUvu9YwfSnZ2dnUVZ_u8AAAAA@giganews.com>,
>   Alan Browne<alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca>  wrote:
>
>> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder
>> (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting
>> CMD-backspace.
>
> You can also just choose the Finder Edit>  Undo command or type
> Command-Z to restore the last file you moved, copied, or deleted.

Sure.  That's expected.  The case stated was a surprise.


-- 
"I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
  I said I didn't know."
                           -Samuel Clemens.
0
Reply alan.browne (3808) 4/28/2012 1:57:30 PM

On 2012-04-27 22:46 , Michelle Steiner wrote:
> In article<4f9b02d6$0$1580$c3e8da3$92d0a893@news.astraweb.com>,
>   Warren Oates<warren.oates@gmail.com>  wrote:
>
>>> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash
>>> folder (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and
>>> hitting CMD-backspace.
>>>
>>> The file was restored (in this case to the desktop)!
>>
>> Damn! It doesn't work in 10.5.8
>>
>> That would be like the old CMD-Y we used to have in the ol' days.
>
> Sorta;command-y also would put back any file dragged from a folder to the
> desktop.

In some (many) systems/apps CTRL-Z was "undo" and CTRL-Y was "re-do". 
Depending on the system and/or app, ctrl-z was "stacked" and ctrl-y was 
or was not stacked.

-- 
"I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
  I said I didn't know."
                           -Samuel Clemens.
0
Reply alan.browne (3808) 4/28/2012 2:54:12 PM

I read with interest about the "shredder"  in dashboard.  I didn't have 
it, so I downloaded it and put it in dashboard.

I am kind of new to Mac and actually read these newsgroups for tips and 
how to's.  Always hoping to learn more - as a newbie to Apple so much 
is cool, but so much is hidden.

So now I have the shredder in dashboard how can I drag a file to it?  
My dashboard (which I use infrequently) is full screen so is either 
open or closed.

MacBookPro OSX 10.7.3

by the way, command delete works for me in trash - moves the file to 
the desktop.

Thanks

Diane



On 2012-04-28 13:53:58 +0000, Alan Browne said:

> You can drag selected files from trash into the "shredder" widget in 
> dashboard.  I do this for some files for privacy reasons.
> 
> The trash, as many pointed out, is not a special storage area, it is a 
> recovery area that should regularly be purged.  I usually clear it by 
> the end of the day.


0
Reply DianeVan (12) 4/28/2012 4:16:48 PM

In article <2012042809164895170-DianeVan@somemailcom>,
 Diane Van <DianeVan@somemail.com> wrote:

> by the way, command delete works for me in trash - moves the file to 
> the desktop.

Only if the file had been moved to the trash from the Desktop; otherwise, 
it's moved back to the folder it was in before it was put in the trash.

-- 
Tea Party Patriots is to Patriotism as 
People's Democratic Republic is to Democracy.
0
Reply michelle14 (18424) 4/28/2012 4:33:16 PM

On 2012-04-28 16:33:16 +0000, Michelle Steiner said:

> In article <2012042809164895170-DianeVan@somemailcom>,
>  Diane Van <DianeVan@somemail.com> wrote:
> 
>> by the way, command delete works for me in trash - moves the file to
>> the desktop.
> 
> Only if the file had been moved to the trash from the Desktop; otherwise,
> it's moved back to the folder it was in before it was put in the trash.

Sure enough, it does.


0
Reply DianeVan (12) 4/28/2012 4:36:35 PM

In article <6qadnd3iOeHrawbSnZ2dnUVZ_rGdnZ2d@giganews.com>,
 Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:

> On 2012-04-27 18:21 , Helpful Harry wrote:
> > In article<OfKdndcgUvu9YwfSnZ2dnUVZ_u8AAAAA@giganews.com>, Alan Browne
> > <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca>  wrote:
> >
> >> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder
> >> (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting
> >> CMD-backspace.
> >>
> >> The file was restored (in this case to the desktop)!
> >>
> >> I checked on the web and that's: normal.
> >>
> >> I would have expected an error message (eg: "This is already deleted!").
> >>
> >> I guess it makes a sort of sense, just never expected it.
> >
> > It would would make more sense if it actually deleted the selected
> > file(s), since being in the Trash isn't really deleted ... which is a
> > missing feature someone else was looking for last week.
> 
> Maybe.  As is, it is sort of a toggle.
> 
> You can drag selected files from trash into the "shredder" widget in 
> dashboard.  I do this for some files for privacy reasons.
> 
> The trash, as many pointed out, is not a special storage area, it is a 
> recovery area that should regularly be purged.  I usually clear it by 
> the end of the day.

I've been using a utility called Compost for many years.  It 
periodically deletes things from the trash, with a number of options to 
control it -- how long they've been in there, how much free space is on 
the drive, etc.

Unfortunately, the developer stopped updating it a few years ago.  But 
it seems to work pretty reliably still.

-- 
Barry Margolin, barmar@alum.mit.edu
Arlington, MA
*** PLEASE post questions in newsgroups, not directly to me ***
0
Reply barmar (5626) 4/28/2012 4:56:14 PM

In article <2012042809363545465-DianeVan@somemailcom>,
 Diane Van <DianeVan@somemail.com> wrote:

> On 2012-04-28 16:33:16 +0000, Michelle Steiner said:
> 
> > In article <2012042809164895170-DianeVan@somemailcom>,
> >  Diane Van <DianeVan@somemail.com> wrote:
> > 
> >> by the way, command delete works for me in trash - moves the file to
> >> the desktop.
> > 
> > Only if the file had been moved to the trash from the Desktop; otherwise,
> > it's moved back to the folder it was in before it was put in the trash.
> 
> Sure enough, it does.

Isn't that what we've been discussing in the thread that spawned this?  
Why are we rehashing it again?

-- 
Barry Margolin, barmar@alum.mit.edu
Arlington, MA
*** PLEASE post questions in newsgroups, not directly to me ***
0
Reply barmar (5626) 4/28/2012 4:57:50 PM

On 2012-04-28 12:16 , Diane Van wrote:
> I read with interest about the "shredder"  in dashboard.  I didn't have
> it, so I downloaded it and put it in dashboard.
>
> I am kind of new to Mac and actually read these newsgroups for tips and
> how to's.  Always hoping to learn more - as a newbie to Apple so much is
> cool, but so much is hidden.

Yes.  Be patient!  There's a lot here:

http://www.macworld.com/howto.html

to help you get going (and several other solid sites).
>
> So now I have the shredder in dashboard how can I drag a file to it? My
> dashboard (which I use infrequently) is full screen so is either open or
> closed.

Welcome to Mac.  I've been a Mac user for a little over 4 years.  Best 
personal computer choice I've made in decades.

Usually you will have set one of the "corners" of the desktop to perform 
an action like moving all app windows out of the way so you can access 
the desktop, or to tile all open apps and so on.  ("Hot Corners" button 
under "Mission Control" in System Prefs).

One of the settings is "Dashboard".  In my case my lower right corner of 
my screen is the "Hot Corner" for Dashboard.  I point the cursor there 
and the dashboard pops up.  You of course can set up whatever hot corner 
you like.  There are also keyboard shortcuts and trackpad gestures that 
effect the same thing.

After that's setup simply drag files to the corner, activating 
dashboard, thence to the shredder widget.  When it displays "This cannot 
be undone" release the file and it begins shredding.

A note about shredder: it has three settings (Green, yellow, red). 
Green simply writes over the file with 0's (or another symbol - I don't 
recall).  It is fast and adequate for most things.  Yellow does several 
passes with different symbols.  Most sensitive data.  Red does many 
passes and more symbols.  I don't recall if this is like 
government/military levels, but it is for utmost paranoia.  Esp. with 
the high density disks today (500 GB and up), the red level is excess.

I use the green setting.  There is nothing of great interest in what I 
shred (personal or business documents, unusable photos) and no agency in 
the world would profit by advanced reading techniques.

As to posting in newsgroups it is generally the practice to reply below 
the prior posting, not on top.  This is the practice of this NG.

-- 
"I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
  I said I didn't know."
                           -Samuel Clemens.
0
Reply alan.browne (3808) 4/28/2012 5:00:48 PM

On 2012-04-28 12:56 , Barry Margolin wrote:
> In article <6qadnd3iOeHrawbSnZ2dnUVZ_rGdnZ2d@giganews.com>,
>   Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:
>
>> On 2012-04-27 18:21 , Helpful Harry wrote:
>>> In article<OfKdndcgUvu9YwfSnZ2dnUVZ_u8AAAAA@giganews.com>, Alan Browne
>>> <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca>  wrote:
>>>
>>>> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder
>>>> (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting
>>>> CMD-backspace.
>>>>
>>>> The file was restored (in this case to the desktop)!
>>>>
>>>> I checked on the web and that's: normal.
>>>>
>>>> I would have expected an error message (eg: "This is already deleted!").
>>>>
>>>> I guess it makes a sort of sense, just never expected it.
>>>
>>> It would would make more sense if it actually deleted the selected
>>> file(s), since being in the Trash isn't really deleted ... which is a
>>> missing feature someone else was looking for last week.
>>
>> Maybe.  As is, it is sort of a toggle.
>>
>> You can drag selected files from trash into the "shredder" widget in
>> dashboard.  I do this for some files for privacy reasons.
>>
>> The trash, as many pointed out, is not a special storage area, it is a
>> recovery area that should regularly be purged.  I usually clear it by
>> the end of the day.
>
> I've been using a utility called Compost for many years.  It
> periodically deletes things from the trash, with a number of options to
> control it -- how long they've been in there, how much free space is on
> the drive, etc.
>
> Unfortunately, the developer stopped updating it a few years ago.  But
> it seems to work pretty reliably still.

I'd go for that if I could flag files for wipe(s) (write over).


-- 
"I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
  I said I didn't know."
                           -Samuel Clemens.


0
Reply alan.browne (3808) 4/28/2012 5:02:18 PM

In article <v5OdnfJC-YkHvwHSnZ2dnUVZ_qGdnZ2d@giganews.com>,
 Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:

> On 2012-04-28 12:56 , Barry Margolin wrote:
> > I've been using a utility called Compost for many years.  It
> > periodically deletes things from the trash, with a number of options to
> > control it -- how long they've been in there, how much free space is on
> > the drive, etc.
> >
> > Unfortunately, the developer stopped updating it a few years ago.  But
> > it seems to work pretty reliably still.
> 
> I'd go for that if I could flag files for wipe(s) (write over).

It has a secure deletion option, but it's not per-file. You can set it 
as a global option, and override it per-volume.

-- 
Barry Margolin, barmar@alum.mit.edu
Arlington, MA
*** PLEASE post questions in newsgroups, not directly to me ***
0
Reply barmar (5626) 4/28/2012 5:10:37 PM

On 2012-04-28 13:10 , Barry Margolin wrote:
> In article <v5OdnfJC-YkHvwHSnZ2dnUVZ_qGdnZ2d@giganews.com>,
>   Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:
>
>> On 2012-04-28 12:56 , Barry Margolin wrote:
>>> I've been using a utility called Compost for many years.  It
>>> periodically deletes things from the trash, with a number of options to
>>> control it -- how long they've been in there, how much free space is on
>>> the drive, etc.
>>>
>>> Unfortunately, the developer stopped updating it a few years ago.  But
>>> it seems to work pretty reliably still.
>>
>> I'd go for that if I could flag files for wipe(s) (write over).
>
> It has a secure deletion option, but it's not per-file. You can set it
> as a global option, and override it per-volume.

That would be acceptable.  I'll take a gander.


-- 
"I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
  I said I didn't know."
                           -Samuel Clemens.


0
Reply alan.browne (3808) 4/28/2012 5:15:17 PM

On 2012-04-28 12:56 , Barry Margolin wrote:

> I've been using a utility called Compost for many years.  It
> periodically deletes things from the trash, with a number of options to
> control it -- how long they've been in there, how much free space is on
> the drive, etc.
>
> Unfortunately, the developer stopped updating it a few years ago.  But
> it seems to work pretty reliably still.

Under Lion?


-- 
"I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
  I said I didn't know."
                           -Samuel Clemens.


0
Reply alan.browne (3808) 4/28/2012 5:17:13 PM

On 2012-04-28 17:00:48 +0000, Alan Browne said:

> On 2012-04-28 12:16 , Diane Van wrote:
>> I read with interest about the "shredder"  in dashboard.  I didn't have
>> it, so I downloaded it and put it in dashboard.
>> 
>> I am kind of new to Mac and actually read these newsgroups for tips and
>> how to's.  Always hoping to learn more - as a newbie to Apple so much is
>> cool, but so much is hidden.
> 
> Yes.  Be patient!  There's a lot here:
> 
> http://www.macworld.com/howto.html
> 
> to help you get going (and several other solid sites).
>> 
>> So now I have the shredder in dashboard how can I drag a file to it? My
>> dashboard (which I use infrequently) is full screen so is either open or
>> closed.
> 
> Welcome to Mac.  I've been a Mac user for a little over 4 years.  Best 
> personal computer choice I've made in decades.
> 
> Usually you will have set one of the "corners" of the desktop to 
> perform an action like moving all app windows out of the way so you can 
> access the desktop, or to tile all open apps and so on.  ("Hot Corners" 
> button under "Mission Control" in System Prefs).
> 
> One of the settings is "Dashboard".  In my case my lower right corner 
> of my screen is the "Hot Corner" for Dashboard.  I point the cursor 
> there and the dashboard pops up.  You of course can set up whatever hot 
> corner you like.  There are also keyboard shortcuts and trackpad 
> gestures that effect the same thing.
> 
> After that's setup simply drag files to the corner, activating 
> dashboard, thence to the shredder widget.  When it displays "This 
> cannot be undone" release the file and it begins shredding.
> 
> A note about shredder: it has three settings (Green, yellow, red). 
> Green simply writes over the file with 0's (or another symbol - I don't 
> recall).  It is fast and adequate for most things.  Yellow does several 
> passes with different symbols.  Most sensitive data.  Red does many 
> passes and more symbols.  I don't recall if this is like 
> government/military levels, but it is for utmost paranoia.  Esp. with 
> the high density disks today (500 GB and up), the red level is excess.
> 
> I use the green setting.  There is nothing of great interest in what I 
> shred (personal or business documents, unusable photos) and no agency 
> in the world would profit by advanced reading techniques.
> 
> As to posting in newsgroups it is generally the practice to reply below 
> the prior posting, not on top.  This is the practice of this NG.

Sorry about replying above.  Thanks for the link and the information.  
I'm off to play now to the detriment of my weekend chores.


0
Reply DianeVan (12) 4/28/2012 5:19:50 PM

In article <v5OdnfJC-YkHvwHSnZ2dnUVZ_qGdnZ2d@giganews.com>,
 Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:

> On 2012-04-28 12:56 , Barry Margolin wrote:
> > In article <6qadnd3iOeHrawbSnZ2dnUVZ_rGdnZ2d@giganews.com>,
> >   Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:
> >
> >> On 2012-04-27 18:21 , Helpful Harry wrote:
> >>> In article<OfKdndcgUvu9YwfSnZ2dnUVZ_u8AAAAA@giganews.com>, Alan Browne
> >>> <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca>  wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> By some unusual sequence of events, I ended up opening the trash folder
> >>>> (rare occurrence), pointing at a file that was in there and hitting
> >>>> CMD-backspace.
> >>>>
> >>>> The file was restored (in this case to the desktop)!
> >>>>
> >>>> I checked on the web and that's: normal.
> >>>>
> >>>> I would have expected an error message (eg: "This is already deleted!").
> >>>>
> >>>> I guess it makes a sort of sense, just never expected it.
> >>>
> >>> It would would make more sense if it actually deleted the selected
> >>> file(s), since being in the Trash isn't really deleted ... which is a
> >>> missing feature someone else was looking for last week.
> >>
> >> Maybe.  As is, it is sort of a toggle.
> >>
> >> You can drag selected files from trash into the "shredder" widget in
> >> dashboard.  I do this for some files for privacy reasons.
> >>
> >> The trash, as many pointed out, is not a special storage area, it is a
> >> recovery area that should regularly be purged.  I usually clear it by
> >> the end of the day.
> >
> > I've been using a utility called Compost for many years.  It
> > periodically deletes things from the trash, with a number of options to
> > control it -- how long they've been in there, how much free space is on
> > the drive, etc.
> >
> > Unfortunately, the developer stopped updating it a few years ago.  But
> > it seems to work pretty reliably still.
> 
> I'd go for that if I could flag files for wipe(s) (write over).

It's not automated, but I like the description of FileShredder: 

<http://voidtech.net/apps/fileshredder/>

-- 
Send responses to the relevant news group rather than email to me.
E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my very hungry SPAM
filter. Due to Google's refusal to prevent spammers from posting
messages through their servers, I often ignore posts from Google
Groups. Use a real news client if you want me to see your posts.

JR
0
Reply jollyroger (10526) 4/28/2012 5:19:59 PM

On 2012-04-28 16:57:50 +0000, Barry Margolin said:

> In article <2012042809363545465-DianeVan@somemailcom>,
>  Diane Van <DianeVan@somemail.com> wrote:
> 
>> On 2012-04-28 16:33:16 +0000, Michelle Steiner said:
>> 
>>> In article <2012042809164895170-DianeVan@somemailcom>,
>>> Diane Van <DianeVan@somemail.com> wrote:
>>> 
>>>> by the way, command delete works for me in trash - moves the file to
>>>> the desktop.
>>> 
>>> Only if the file had been moved to the trash from the Desktop; otherwise,
>>> it's moved back to the folder it was in before it was put in the trash.
>> 
>> Sure enough, it does.
> 
> Isn't that what we've been discussing in the thread that spawned this?
> Why are we rehashing it again?

For a dumb newbie who is trying to learn.  Sorry to offend.

0
Reply DianeVan (12) 4/28/2012 5:21:49 PM

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1

On Saturday, 28 April 2012 09:16 -0700, 
 in article <2012042809164895170-DianeVan@somemailcom>, 
 Diane Van <DianeVan@somemail.com> wrote:

> I read with interest about the "shredder" in dashboard.  I didn't 
> have it, so I downloaded it and put it in dashboard.

> I am kind of new to Mac and actually read these newsgroups for tips 
> and how to's.  Always hoping to learn more - as a newbie to Apple so 
> much is cool, but so much is hidden.

> So now I have the shredder in dashboard how can I drag a file to it?  
> My dashboard (which I use infrequently) is full screen so is either 
> open or closed.

Diane,

In order to try to tackle your question, I downloaded, installed and 
uninstalled Shredder.wdgt.  While I'm an experienced Mac user, I'll be 
damned, if I can figure out how to make this thing work.

If it is your intention to actually delete a file, rather than simply 
removing its directory listing -- that is to make the file 
unrecoverable -- there are a couple of options available to you.  
Neither of these options require any additional software.  Both are 
provided as part of Mac OS X.

If you prefer using a GUI (Graphical User Interface), go to the Finder 
and either select Finder:Preferences or use the keyboard short-cut, 
'command-,'.  Under the Advanced settings, you have to option of 
checking 'Empty Trash securely'.  Choosing this option will overwrite 
any and all files in your Trash.  IIRC, it will overwrite the file(s) 
with random text characters 35 times, then zeros.  One must be 
extremely careful when using this setting, always remembering that 
once a file is deleted in this manner, it cannot be recovered; it's 
gone.

If you're comfortable using a CLI (Command Line Interface), launch 
Terminal.app in your Utilities folder, and type, "man srm <RETURN>."  
Note, this offers you a lot more control over what takes place, as 
the file you want to shred is not required to be in the Trash.  Here, 
you also have the choice of how securely the file(s) are overwritten; 
single pass, 7 US DoD compliant passes, or the default 35 passes.  
(The fewer passes, the more quickly the operation will complete.)

Normally, I'll run:

 srm -rvz <complete path(s) to file(s) or director(y|ies)>

The thing to remember, in all cases, is that once files are 
overwritten in this manner, they cannot be recovered from the disk 
upon which they previously existed.

- -- 
David Ritz <dritz@mindspring.com>
 Be kind to animals; kiss a shark.

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0
Reply dritz (93) 4/28/2012 5:26:02 PM

On 2012-04-28 13:19 , Jolly Roger wrote:
> In article <v5OdnfJC-YkHvwHSnZ2dnUVZ_qGdnZ2d@giganews.com>,
>   Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:
>
>> On 2012-04-28 12:56 , Barry Margolin wrote:

>>> I've been using a utility called Compost for many years.  It
>>> periodically deletes things from the trash, with a number of options to
>>> control it -- how long they've been in there, how much free space is on
>>> the drive, etc.
>>>
>>> Unfortunately, the developer stopped updating it a few years ago.  But
>>> it seems to work pretty reliably still.
>>
>> I'd go for that if I could flag files for wipe(s) (write over).
>
> It's not automated, but I like the description of FileShredder:
>
> <http://voidtech.net/apps/fileshredder/>

I could spare $4 for that.  I'll look into it.


-- 
"I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
  I said I didn't know."
                           -Samuel Clemens.


0
Reply alan.browne (3808) 4/28/2012 5:27:12 PM

In article <alpine.OSX.2.00.1204281156020.6878@mako.ath.cx>,
 David Ritz <dritz@mindspring.com> wrote:

> If you're comfortable using a CLI (Command Line Interface), launch 
> Terminal.app in your Utilities folder, and type, "man srm <RETURN>."  
> Note, this offers you a lot more control over what takes place, as 
> the file you want to shred is not required to be in the Trash.  Here, 
> you also have the choice of how securely the file(s) are overwritten; 
> single pass, 7 US DoD compliant passes, or the default 35 passes.  
> (The fewer passes, the more quickly the operation will complete.)
> 
> Normally, I'll run:
> 
>  srm -rvz <complete path(s) to file(s) or director(y|ies)>

This is the method I most often use - which is why I haven't ever 
bothered to purchase a utility to do it. 

I like the ability to selectively securely delete files rather than 
having to delete the entire contents of the trash securely, which often 
takes quite a while for me, because I don't empty my trash often.

-- 
Send responses to the relevant news group rather than email to me.
E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my very hungry SPAM
filter. Due to Google's refusal to prevent spammers from posting
messages through their servers, I often ignore posts from Google
Groups. Use a real news client if you want me to see your posts.

JR
0
Reply jollyroger (10526) 4/28/2012 5:36:35 PM

On 2012-04-28 13:26 , David Ritz wrote:

> In order to try to tackle your question, I downloaded, installed and
> uninstalled Shredder.wdgt.  While I'm an experienced Mac user, I'll be

"Experienced"?   And signs mundane usenet posts with PGP?

> damned, if I can figure out how to make this thing work.

"Experienced" but not enough to go to the developers website?

Drag the file(s) to the dashboard hot corner.  Up pops the dashboard. 
Drop the file on the shredder widget.

Options: tap on the widget to change the security level.

It was all self evident to me.

> If it is your intention to actually delete a file, rather than simply
> removing its directory listing -- that is to make the file
> unrecoverable -- there are a couple of options available to you.
> Neither of these options require any additional software.  Both are
> provided as part of Mac OS X.
>
> If you prefer using a GUI (Graphical User Interface), go to the Finder
> and either select Finder:Preferences or use the keyboard short-cut,
> 'command-,'.  Under the Advanced settings, you have to option of
> checking 'Empty Trash securely'.  Choosing this option will overwrite
> any and all files in your Trash.  IIRC, it will overwrite the file(s)
> with random text characters 35 times, then zeros.

35 times was developed for old disk drives with low density and to cover 
three different physical write methods in use by various manufacturers. 
  Even Guttman says it's excessive for a given drive.  (2/3 of the 
passes are redundant for the particular drive under re-write!  Serious 
overkill).

It's esp. excessive with today's vertical write high density disk drives.

A 7 pass algo would now be sufficient for most very sensitive documents 
(government/military) on 3.5" drives over 500 GB.  To protect one's 
personal data (credit card info and taxes and so on), a single pass is 
more than enough.  When discarding a drive (selling it used), maybe 7 
pass is justified - but I just wipe to 0 then write random numbers to it 
(2 passes).

-- 
"I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
  I said I didn't know."
                           -Samuel Clemens.
0
Reply alan.browne (3808) 4/28/2012 5:50:57 PM

On 2012-04-28 13:36 , Jolly Roger wrote:
> In article <alpine.OSX.2.00.1204281156020.6878@mako.ath.cx>,
>   David Ritz <dritz@mindspring.com> wrote:

>> Normally, I'll run:
>>
>>   srm -rvz <complete path(s) to file(s) or director(y|ies)>
>
> This is the method I most often use - which is why I haven't ever
> bothered to purchase a utility to do it.
>
> I like the ability to selectively securely delete files rather than
> having to delete the entire contents of the trash securely, which often
> takes quite a while for me, because I don't empty my trash often.

Shredder widget.  In fact I sometimes drag files there directly, 
bypassing the trash.

CLI is fine for some and many some of the time, but for newbies like 
Diane and people who don't like CLI much (me), a GUI is easier and 
probably safer.

I just used srm in a test and it does seem fine.

-- 
"I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
  I said I didn't know."
                           -Samuel Clemens.


0
Reply alan.browne (3808) 4/28/2012 6:03:56 PM

In article <alpine.OSX.2.00.1204281156020.6878@mako.ath.cx>,
 David Ritz <dritz@mindspring.com> wrote:

> In order to try to tackle your question, I downloaded, installed and 
> uninstalled Shredder.wdgt.  While I'm an experienced Mac user, I'll be 
> damned, if I can figure out how to make this thing work.

I had to go to their website to find out; here are the instructions:

     How-to
     To shred a document, click and drag a file from the Finder. Then use 
     the F4 Dashboard hotkey (or F12 on on some keyboards) to call up 
     Dashboard, keeping the document in hand. Drop it on the shredder to 
     permanently erase it from your system. If you want to adjust the 
     shred level while dragging, simply press the spacebar while hovering 
     over the widget.

On my system, it's F16; also, Dashboard cannot be in its own space (Mission 
Control Preferences).  But it does work with that configuration.

-- 
Tea Party Patriots is to Patriotism as 
People's Democratic Republic is to Democracy.
0
Reply michelle14 (18424) 4/28/2012 6:28:26 PM

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1

On Saturday, 28 April 2012 13:50 -0400, 
 in article <BJCdnZBjQpGfswHSnZ2dnUVZ_rCdnZ2d@giganews.com>, 
 Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:

> On 2012-04-28 13:26, David Ritz wrote:

>> In order to try to tackle your question, I downloaded, installed 
>> and uninstalled Shredder.wdgt.  While I'm an experienced Mac user, 
>> I'll be

> "Experienced"?   And signs mundane usenet posts with PGP?

Indeed I do.  I've done so, ever since being forged in better than 
30,000 articles, within one twenty four hour period, in 1998.  If it 
bothers you, I'm easily killfiled, by From line or Message-ID.

I don't use Lauchpad, Mission Control or Dashboard frequently enough to 
bother assigning a Hot Corner to any of them.  After your initial 
post, detailing the way _you_ drag a file into Dashboard, I found I 
was able to do so using click-hold-F12.  (click-hold-fn-F4 also works, 
although it's a literal stretch.)

- -- 
David Ritz <dritz@mindspring.com>
 Videotron UDP Notice:
    http://al.howardknight.net/msgid.cgi?ID=133564029600
 Be kind to animals; kiss a shark.

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0
Reply dritz (93) 4/28/2012 7:18:38 PM

In article <ZI6dnW1TgKKEuwHSnZ2dnUVZ_sgAAAAA@giganews.com>,
 Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:

> On 2012-04-28 12:56 , Barry Margolin wrote:
> 
> > I've been using a utility called Compost for many years.  It
> > periodically deletes things from the trash, with a number of options to
> > control it -- how long they've been in there, how much free space is on
> > the drive, etc.
> >
> > Unfortunately, the developer stopped updating it a few years ago.  But
> > it seems to work pretty reliably still.
> 
> Under Lion?

No idea, I'm still running Snow Leopard.

It's a 32-bit preference pane, so when you try to open it you get that 
annoying "System Preferences has to restart" pop-up.

-- 
Barry Margolin, barmar@alum.mit.edu
Arlington, MA
*** PLEASE post questions in newsgroups, not directly to me ***
0
Reply barmar (5626) 4/28/2012 7:19:28 PM

In article <2012042810214966619-DianeVan@somemailcom>,
 Diane Van <DianeVan@somemail.com> wrote:

> On 2012-04-28 16:57:50 +0000, Barry Margolin said:
> 
> > In article <2012042809363545465-DianeVan@somemailcom>,
> >  Diane Van <DianeVan@somemail.com> wrote:
> > 
> >> On 2012-04-28 16:33:16 +0000, Michelle Steiner said:
> >> 
> >>> In article <2012042809164895170-DianeVan@somemailcom>,
> >>> Diane Van <DianeVan@somemail.com> wrote:
> >>> 
> >>>> by the way, command delete works for me in trash - moves the file to
> >>>> the desktop.
> >>> 
> >>> Only if the file had been moved to the trash from the Desktop; otherwise,
> >>> it's moved back to the folder it was in before it was put in the trash.
> >> 
> >> Sure enough, it does.
> > 
> > Isn't that what we've been discussing in the thread that spawned this?
> > Why are we rehashing it again?
> 
> For a dumb newbie who is trying to learn.  Sorry to offend.

Not offended, just surprised that you thought it was news.  You were 
replying to a thread with the following in the subject: "Cmd-Backspace 
in trash puts the file back".

-- 
Barry Margolin, barmar@alum.mit.edu
Arlington, MA
*** PLEASE post questions in newsgroups, not directly to me ***
0
Reply barmar (5626) 4/28/2012 7:27:19 PM

On 2012-04-28 15:18 , David Ritz wrote:

>> "Experienced"?   And signs mundane usenet posts with PGP?
>
> Indeed I do.  I've done so, ever since being forged in better than
> 30,000 articles, within one twenty four hour period, in 1998.  If it

And how many times since then?  To put a point on it you're the only 
signing poster I've seen in over 5 years.

-- 
"I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
  I said I didn't know."
                           -Samuel Clemens.


0
Reply alan.browne (3808) 4/28/2012 8:15:53 PM

On 2012-04-28 15:19 , Barry Margolin wrote:
> In article <ZI6dnW1TgKKEuwHSnZ2dnUVZ_sgAAAAA@giganews.com>,
>   Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:
>
>> On 2012-04-28 12:56 , Barry Margolin wrote:
>>
>>> I've been using a utility called Compost for many years.  It
>>> periodically deletes things from the trash, with a number of options to
>>> control it -- how long they've been in there, how much free space is on
>>> the drive, etc.
>>>
>>> Unfortunately, the developer stopped updating it a few years ago.  But
>>> it seems to work pretty reliably still.
>>
>> Under Lion?
>
> No idea, I'm still running Snow Leopard.

I'll wait 'til I hear of it running trouble free on Lion.  I'll probably 
buy the one JR mentioned.

>
> It's a 32-bit preference pane, so when you try to open it you get that
> annoying "System Preferences has to restart" pop-up.

Minor inconvenience.


-- 
"I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
  I said I didn't know."
                           -Samuel Clemens.


0
Reply alan.browne (3808) 4/28/2012 8:16:50 PM

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1

On Saturday, 28 April 2012 16:15 -0400, 
 in article <yIednXN7QfZk0gHSnZ2dnUVZ_v-dnZ2d@giganews.com>, 
 Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:

> On 2012-04-28 15:18 , David Ritz wrote:

>>> "Experienced"?   And signs mundane usenet posts with PGP?

>> Indeed I do.  I've done so, ever since being forged in better than 
>> 30,000 articles, within one twenty four hour period, in 1998.  If 
>> it [...]

> And how many times since then?

Enough times, that I have no intention of changing the practice of 
cryptographically signing my outbound messages, whether to Usenet or 
in email.

> To put a point on it you're the only signing poster I've seen in 
> over 5 years.

Obviously, you and I follow different newsgroups.  I haven't seen 
another Usenet post, other than my own, which was signed, since last 
Wednesday, 25 April 2012.

  <news:cone.1335356993.303412.17051.1000@monster.email-scan.com>
  (<http://al.howardknight.net/msgid.cgi?ID=133565838900>)

Now may we give it a rest, please?

- -- 
David Ritz <dritz@mindspring.com>
 "Truth is the most valuable thing we have. Let us economize it."
                                               - Mark Twain (1835-1910)

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v2.0.18 (Darwin)
Comment: Public Keys: <http://dritz.home.mindspring.com/keys.txt>

iEYEARECAAYFAk+ci8MACgkQUrwpmRoS3utIUgCg3DQvyWGT4VrCrHuHjnZDtKPC
6qwAniY0d9KVBANp7DZu+ejex2knd5Pv
=qr6Y
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
0
Reply dritz (93) 4/29/2012 12:30:56 AM

In article <alpine.OSX.2.00.1204281910200.14481@mako.ath.cx>,
 David Ritz <dritz@mindspring.com> wrote:

> Enough times, that I have no intention of changing the practice of 
> cryptographically signing my outbound messages, whether to Usenet or 
> in email.

It won't make a difference for anyone except the minuscule number of people 
who read the newsgroup, have PGP and bother to use it on the newsgroup, and 
who also have your public key.  On this NG, I wouldn't be surprised if that 
number is zero.

-- 
Tea Party Patriots is to Patriotism as 
People's Democratic Republic is to Democracy.
0
Reply michelle14 (18424) 4/29/2012 1:00:50 AM

On 2012-04-28 20:30 , David Ritz wrote:

> Obviously, you and I follow different newsgroups.  I haven't seen
> another Usenet post, other than my own, which was signed, since last
> Wednesday, 25 April 2012.
>
>    <news:cone.1335356993.303412.17051.1000@monster.email-scan.com>
>    (<http://al.howardknight.net/msgid.cgi?ID=133565838900>)

Like that drool counts for anything.

>
> Now may we give it a rest, please?

No.   It's neurotic silly.  Tinfoil hat paranoid.  Messy.



-- 
"I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
  I said I didn't know."
                           -Samuel Clemens.


0
Reply alan.browne (3808) 4/29/2012 12:41:03 PM

In article <mbKdneOm6OB9qwDSnZ2dnUVZ_q-dnZ2d@giganews.com>,
 Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:

> On 2012-04-28 20:30 , David Ritz wrote:
> 
> > Obviously, you and I follow different newsgroups.  I haven't seen
> > another Usenet post, other than my own, which was signed, since last
> > Wednesday, 25 April 2012.
> >
> >    <news:cone.1335356993.303412.17051.1000@monster.email-scan.com>
> >    (<http://al.howardknight.net/msgid.cgi?ID=133565838900>)
> 
> Like that drool counts for anything.

Yeah, really. Howard Knight? Talk about drool.

> 
> >
> > Now may we give it a rest, please?
> 
> No.   It's neurotic silly.  Tinfoil hat paranoid.  Messy.

The only place it makes sense is in APAS, and like that, where the 
remailer operators post with PGP signatures to prove that it's really 
them making changes or announcements, so that the users know that it's 
not some frogger causing trouble.

On the other hand, the longest running (afaik) and most reliable 
remailer is run by a Dutch gentleman who has never used a PGP signature 
in all the years he's been posting. So there.

And while we're posting drool:

http://davidritz.net/

dunno if it's the same David Ritz.
-- 
Too much kipple.
0
Reply lah1 (3) 4/29/2012 2:12:22 PM

In article <mbKdneOm6OB9qwDSnZ2dnUVZ_q-dnZ2d@giganews.com>,
 Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:

> On 2012-04-28 20:30 , David Ritz wrote:
> 
> > Obviously, you and I follow different newsgroups.  I haven't seen
> > another Usenet post, other than my own, which was signed, since last
> > Wednesday, 25 April 2012.
> >
> >    <news:cone.1335356993.303412.17051.1000@monster.email-scan.com>
> >    (<http://al.howardknight.net/msgid.cgi?ID=133565838900>)
> 
> Like that drool counts for anything.
> 
> >
> > Now may we give it a rest, please?
> 
> No.   It's neurotic silly.  Tinfoil hat paranoid.  Messy.

I have to say, I don't quite understand why anyone cares either way. 
Usenet signatures are a dime a dozen, and often are lengthy. It seems 
like a complete waste of time to get into an argument about such a 
thing. Who cares?

-- 
Send responses to the relevant news group rather than email to me.
E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my very hungry SPAM
filter. Due to Google's refusal to prevent spammers from posting
messages through their servers, I often ignore posts from Google
Groups. Use a real news client if you want me to see your posts.

JR
0
Reply jollyroger (10526) 4/29/2012 3:58:35 PM

On 2012-04-29 11:58 , Jolly Roger wrote:
> In article <mbKdneOm6OB9qwDSnZ2dnUVZ_q-dnZ2d@giganews.com>,
>   Alan Browne <alan.browne@FreelunchVideotron.ca> wrote:
>
>> On 2012-04-28 20:30 , David Ritz wrote:
>>
>>> Obviously, you and I follow different newsgroups.  I haven't seen
>>> another Usenet post, other than my own, which was signed, since last
>>> Wednesday, 25 April 2012.
>>>
>>>     <news:cone.1335356993.303412.17051.1000@monster.email-scan.com>
>>>     (<http://al.howardknight.net/msgid.cgi?ID=133565838900>)
>>
>> Like that drool counts for anything.
>>
>>>
>>> Now may we give it a rest, please?
>>
>> No.   It's neurotic silly.  Tinfoil hat paranoid.  Messy.
>
> I have to say, I don't quite understand why anyone cares either way.
> Usenet signatures are a dime a dozen, and often are lengthy. It seems
> like a complete waste of time to get into an argument about such a
> thing. Who cares?

I don't.  Just picking on litter bugs.  I plonked him anyway.


-- 
"I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
  I said I didn't know."
                           -Samuel Clemens.


0
Reply alan.browne (3808) 4/29/2012 10:32:29 PM

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