- LISTSERV
LISTSERV is the first electronic mailing list software application. [ [http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/scripts/wa.exe?A0=LSTSRV-L Unedited archives of LSTSRV-L, LISTSERV site administrators' forum, July 1986-] ]
Prior to LISTSERV, email lists were managed manually. To join or leave a list, people would write to the human list administrator and ask to be added or removed, a process that only got more time-consuming as discussion lists grew in popularity.
LISTSERV was freeware from 1986 through 1993 and is now a commercial product developed by L-Soft, a company founded by LISTSERV author Eric Thomas in 1994. [ [http://www.lsoft.com/corporate/ericthomas_cv.asp CV of Eric Thomas] ] A free version limited to 10 lists of up to 500 subscribers each can be downloaded from the company’s web site.
History
In 1986, Eric Thomas invented the concept of an automated mailing list manager; that year, while a student in Paris, he developed the software now known as LISTSERV. [ [http://www.nic.funet.fi/index/FUNET/history/internet/en/1986.html History of the Internet - 1986] ] The early software features developed by Thomas included the capability to send commands to LISTSERV to join or leave a list without the need for human administration, as well as the concept of a list owner (other than the system administrator) who could add or remove subscribers, edit templates for welcome messages and other system messages. Among other innovations, LISTSERV introduced double opt-in in 1993 and the first spam filter in 1995. [ [http://www.lsoft.com/corporate/history_listserv.asp LISTSERV product history timeline] ]
Trademark
LISTSERV is a registered trademark with the
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office [ [http://tarr.uspto.gov/servlet/tarr?regser=registration&entry=2001258 LISTSERV Trademark Registration at USPTO] ] and the Swedish Patent and Registration Office,PRV . [ [http://www.prv.se/In-English/Trademarks/ PRV, the Swedish Patent and Registration Office ] ] As such, using the word "listserv" to describe a different product or as a generic term for any email-based mailing list of that kind is a trademark misuse. The standard generic terms are "electronic mailing list" or "email list" for the list itself, and "email list manager" or "email list software" for the software product that manages the list. [ [http://www.lsoft.com/corporate/trademark.asp LISTSERV trademark information] ]Security
The integrated
F-Secure Anti-Virus system in LISTSERV software scans every message and attachment posted to a mailing list for viruses. LISTSERV is the first and so far the only email list software providing such built-in virus protection. If a virus is detected, the message is automatically rejected. [ [http://edition.cnn.com/2001/TECH/industry/10/30/fsecure.email.idg/index.html Costello Sam. "E-mail lists get virus protection", "CNN.com, Sci-Tech", October 30, 2001] ]Through version 15.0, individual user passwords were stored cleartext and available to users who are listed as Site Managers or "Postmasters" in the application configuration. Passwords are encrypted since version 15.5.
Editions
LISTSERV is available in several licensing options: [http://www.lsoft.com/download/listservfree.asp LISTSERV Free Edition] for non-commercial hobby use, LISTSERV Lite for smaller workloads, LISTSERV Classic the standard, full-featured version, LISTSERV HPO (High Performance Option) and LISTSERV Maestro (for customized and targeted email publishing and reporting).
Supported operating systems
LISTSERV is currently available for and supported on
Linux , Solaris,FreeBSD , AIX,Mac OS X ,OpenVMS ,HP-UX ,Tru64 , VM andMicrosoft Windows (XP, 2000, and 2003).Historic reference — BITNIC LISTSERV, 1984-1986
A program that allowed mailing lists to be implemented on
IBM VM mainframes was developed byIra Fuchs , Daniel Oberst, and Ricky Hernandez in 1984.This mailing list service was known at LISTSERV@BITNIC and quickly became a key service on theBITNET network. It provided functionality similar to aSendmail alias and was managed manually (sendmail was not available on IBM mainframes at the time). After the release of Thomas’ LISTSERV in 1986, LISTSERV@BITNIC was enhanced to provide automatic list management, but was abandoned a few months later when BITNIC installed Thomas’ LISTSERV. [ [http://www.listserv.dfn.de/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind8701&L=NODMGT-L&P=R2&I=-3 BITNET Network Information Center announcement by Judith Molka on the NODMGT-L List, January 7, 1987] ]Contemporaneously,
North Carolina State University had been given a copy of the BITNIC code to run on their mainframe (LISTSERV@NCSUVM). This was actually a modified version of the code with improvements from Alan B. Clegg. NCSU switched to Thomas’ LISTSERV in 1986.Other than their name, BITNIC’s and Thomas’ products are unrelated. Neither product is based on the other product’s code. [ [http://www.lsoft.com/products/listserv-history.asp History of LISTSERV@BITNIC and LISTSERV email list management software, 1985-1995] ]See also
*
Majordomo (software) ,
*Massively distributed collaboration
*GNU Mailman References
External links
* [http://www.lsoft.com/products/listserv.asp LISTSERV product information on L-Soft's website]
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