Re: 'public name'

2006-06-13 Thread Niclas Hedhman
On Monday 12 June 2006 17:19, Upayavira wrote: > I am, I suspect, the person in question. As you might guess, Upayavira > isn't my legal name, but the one I was given when ordained as a Buddhist. For the record, this can be one step more complicated than that. I, for instance, have two legal name

Re: 'public name'

2006-06-12 Thread Upayavira
Justin Erenkrantz wrote: > On 6/11/06, Jim Jagielski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >> Their "real" legal name is only used in cases where it is actually >> legally required. In all other cases, we use their private >> name. This is even the case for things like the member >> attendance records of t

Re: 'public name'

2006-06-12 Thread Justin Erenkrantz
On 6/11/06, Jim Jagielski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Their "real" legal name is only used in cases where it is actually legally required. In all other cases, we use their private name. This is even the case for things like the member attendance records of the foundation, etc... In short, I th

Re: 'public name'

2006-06-11 Thread Jim Jagielski
code to OFBiz who is reticent about having their name in public, which is what I assume the 'public name' field of the iclas.txt file is for. That's only available to members, right? Where else does the real name get used? If the person in question can't trust the AS

Re: 'public name'

2006-06-11 Thread Jim Jagielski
We have a person who has contributed code to OFBiz who is reticent about having their name in public, which is what I assume the 'public name' field of the iclas.txt file is for. That's only available to members, right? Where else does the real name get used? If the person in que

'public name'

2006-06-10 Thread David N. Welton
Hi, We have a person who has contributed code to OFBiz who is reticent about having their name in public, which is what I assume the 'public name' field of the iclas.txt file is for. That's only available to members, right? Where else does the real name get used? If the person in