Signature block

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Short description: Type of personalized block


A signature block (often abbreviated as signature, sig block, sig file, .sig, dot sig, siggy, or just sig) is a personalized block of text automatically appended at the bottom of an email message, Usenet article, or forum post.

Email and Usenet

An email signature is a block of text appended to the end of an email message often containing the sender's name, address, phone number, disclaimer or other contact information.

"Traditional" internet cultural .sig practices assume the use of monospaced ASCII text because they pre-date MIME and the use of HTML in email. In this tradition, it is common practice for a signature block to consist of one or more lines containing some brief information on the author of the message such as phone number and email address, URLs for sites owned or favoured by the author—but also often a quotation (occasionally automatically generated by such tools as fortune), or an ASCII art picture.

  |\_/|        ****************************    (\_/)
 / @ @ \       *  "Purrrfectly pleasant"  *   (='.'=)
( > º < )      *       Poppy Prinz        *   (")_(")
 `>>x<<´       *   (pprinz@example.com)   *
 /  O  \       ****************************

Example of a signature block using ASCII art.

Most email clients, including Mozilla Thunderbird, Opera Mail, Microsoft Outlook, Outlook Express, and Eudora, can be configured to automatically append an email signature with each new message. A shortened form of a signature block (sometimes called a "signature line"), only including one's name, often with some distinguishing prefix, can be used to simply indicate the end of a post or response. Most email servers can be configured to append email signatures to all outgoing mail as well.

Email signature generator

An email signature generator is an app or an online web app that allows users to create a designed email signature using a pre-made template (with no need for HTML coding skills).

Signatures in Usenet postings

Signature blocks are also used in the Usenet discussion system.

...orist it's an unnecessary optimization and a (to use your words)
"performance hack", but I'm interested in a Real operating system ---
not a research toy.

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Theodore Ts'o				bloom-beacon!mit-athena!tytso
308 High St., Medford, MA 02155		ty...@athena.mit.edu
   Everybody's playing the game, but nobody's rules are the same!
a real example from Theodore Ts'o during the Tanenbaum–Torvalds debate[1][2]

Email signatures in business

Businesses often automatically append signature blocks to messages—or have policies mandating a certain style. Generally they resemble standard business cards in their content—and often in their presentation—with company logos and sometimes even the exact appearance of a business card. In some cases, a vCard is automatically attached.

In addition to these standard items, email disclaimers of various sorts are often automatically appended. These are typically couched in legal jargon, but it is unclear what weight they have in law, and they are routinely lampooned.[3][4]

Business emails may also use some signature block elements mandated by local laws:

  • Germany requires companies to disclose their company name, registration number, place of registration etc. in email signatures, in any business-related emails.[5]
  • Ireland's Director of Corporate Enforcement requires all limited companies operating websites to disclose such information in their emails.[6]
  • The UK's ECommerce Regulations (reflecting EU law) require this information in all emails from limited companies.[7] In England and Wales the case of Mehta v J Pereira Fernandes clarified that an email address header added to an email by the email application did not count as a signature for legal purposes, but
    A party can sign a document for the purposes of Section 4 [of the Statute of Frauds] by using his full name or his last name prefixed by some or all of his initials or using his initials, and possibly by using a pseudonym or a combination of letters and numbers (as can happen for example with a Lloyds slip scratch), providing always that whatever was used was inserted into the document in order to give, and with the intention of giving, authenticity to it.[8]

While criticized by some [who?] as overly bureaucratic, these regulations only extend existing laws for paper business correspondence to email.

Standard delimiter

The Usenet news system standards say that a signature block is conventionally delimited from the body of the message by a single line consisting of exactly two hyphens, followed by a space, followed by the end of line (i.e., in C-notation: "-- \n").[9][10][11] This latter prescription goes by many names, including “dash dash space”, "sig dashes", "signature cut line", "sig-marker", "sig separator" and "signature delimiter". It allows software to automatically mark or remove the sig block as the receiver desires.

-- 
Brad Templeton, publisher, ClariNet Communications Corp.         in...@clari.net
The net's #1 E-Newspaper (1,160,000 paid sbscrbrs.)  http://www.clari.net/brad/
a real example from Brad Templeton posting in rec.humor.funny in 1995 showing sig dashes.[2][12]

Most Usenet clients (including, for example, Mozilla Thunderbird) will recognize the signature block delimiter in a news article and will cut off the signature below it when inserting a quote of the original message into the composition window for a reply. Although the Usenet standards strictly apply only to Usenet news articles, this same delimiter convention is widely used in email messages as well, and email clients (such as K-9, Opera Mail, and Gmail[13] commonly use it for recognition and special handling of signatures in email.

Internet forums

On web forums, the rules are often less strict on how a signature block is formatted, as Web browsers typically are not operated within the same constraints as text interface applications. Users will typically define their signature as part of their profile. Depending on the board's capabilities, signatures may range from a simple line or two of text to an elaborately constructed HTML piece. Images are often allowed as well, including dynamically updated images usually hosted remotely and modified by a server-side script. In some cases avatars or hackergotchis take over some of the role of signatures.

FidoNet

With FidoNet, echomail and netmail software would often add an origin line at the end of a message. This would indicate the FidoNet address and name of the originating system (not the user). The user posting the message would generally not have any control over the origin line. However, single-line taglines, added under user control, would often contain a humorous or witty saying. Multi-line user signature blocks were rare.

However, a tearline standard for FidoNet was included in FTS-0004[14] and clarified in FSC-0068[15] as three dashes optionally followed by a space optionally followed by text.

See also

Notes and references

  1. "LINUX is obsolete", comp.os.minix
  2. 2.0 2.1 Note that the email address has been automatically obfuscated by Google Groups
  3. "Spare us the e-mail yada-yada", The Economist: 73, April 9, 2011, http://www.economist.com/node/18529895 
  4. Lester Haines (18 May 2001), "The Email Disclaimer Awards 2001", The Register, https://www.theregister.co.uk/2001/05/18/readers_letters_the_email_disclaimer/ 
  5. ""German bureaucracy, coming to your e-mail now"". 9 February 2007. http://theotherthomasotter.wordpress.com/2007/02/09/german-bureaucracy-coming-to-your-email-now/. 
  6. "Irish ODCE Information Notice I/2007/2 - Disclosure of Company Particulars in E-Communications and on Websites"
  7. Pinsent Masons (16 June 2023). ""ECommerce Regulations"". http://www.out-law.com/page-431. 
  8. Nilesh Mehta v J Pereira Fernandes SA: ChD 7 Apr 2006, quoted in Swarbrick, D., Mehta v J Pereira Fernandes SA: ChD 7 Apr 2006, updated 19 January 2022, accessed 21 January 2023
  9. The Text/Plain Format and DelSp Parameters, February 2004, sec. 4.3, doi:10.17487/RFC3676, RFC 3676, https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3676, "There is a long-standing convention in Usenet news which also commonly appears in Internet mail of using "-- " as the separator line between the body and the signature of a message." 
  10. [1] RFC 1849: “Son of 1036”: News Article Format and Transmission, section 4.3 (1994, minor revisions 2010), said that "If a poster or posting agent does append a signature to an article, the signature SHOULD be preceded with a delimiter line containing (only) two hyphens (ASCII 45) followed by one blank (ASCII 32)." However, RFC 1849 was superseded by RFC 5536 (2009), which says nothing at all about signature blocks or delimiters.
  11. [2] "Usenet Best Practice", Usenet Format Working Group, section 3.1.2.1 (2005) said that "Whenever a poster or posting agent appends such a signature to an article, it MUST be preceded with a delimiter line containing (only) two hyphens (US-ASCII 45) followed by one SP (US-ASCII 32)." However, this document was an "Internet-Draft" and was never adopted as a standard.
  12. "Admin: "Internet Jokebook" price reduced to $9.95", 02/12/1995, rec.humor.funny
  13. ""Guide to enabling disabling email delimiter in Gmail by the company Patronum"". https://www.patronum.io/why-do-i-have-two-dashes-above-my-email-signature. 
  14. ""FidoNet EchoMail Specification"". http://www.ftsc.org/docs/fts-0004.001. 
  15. ""A Proposed Replacement For FTS-0004"". http://www.ftsc.org/docs/fsc-0068.001. 

External links




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