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Brand Indicators for Message Identification (BIMI) is even worse than Extended Validation (EV) certificates. bimigroup.org $1500/year to purchase a Verified Mark Certificate (VMC) as proof that you own a trademark for a logo in order to have Gmail display it to users.
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They present it as if it's a way of encouraging adoption of DMARC. Gmail doesn't use an enforcing DMARC policy yet so it fails their own check for BIMI readiness. Perhaps fix that and add proper authenticated transport encryption support for Gmail instead of this silly nonsense.
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The SVG Tiny Portable/Secure format is neat though. It's a further restricted form of SVG Tiny 1.2 created as part of the BIMI standard. datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft Talked about this with last year right before this new standard was available:
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Replying to @DanielMicay and @RichFelker
The full specification of SVG 2 does actually have the concept of secure and static modes: w3.org/TR/SVG2/confor 'Secure static mode' disables external references, scripts, declarative animation and interactivity. It's still an insanely complicated specification though.
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SVG Tiny Portable/Secure is SVG Tiny 1.2 without scripts, animations, interactivity, external references of any kind or x/y attributes in the root element. Most tools don't support it yet so you need to export the most minimal supported format and manually convert. It's easy.
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Replying to and
SVG Tiny 1.2 is a far more reasonable standard than normal SVG and SVG Tiny Portable/Secure strips out the animation/interactivity/scripting support among other things. I have some minor annoyances with SVG Tiny P/S such as how they forgot to allow viewport-fill for the root.
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Replying to and
They also stripped out a bunch of the overly complex vector image support and a ton of other things. There are a couple things like viewport-fill for the root which should be supported and are strangely absent. I think it just a mistake in defining the grammar and I emailed them.
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wait the "tiny" format still has all of those features? That seems a bit... convoluted Reminds me of how Adobe Reader has a dedicated "Read Mode", quite ironic I would say
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