RFC 1911 (rfc1911) - Page 2 of 22
Voice Profile for Internet Mail
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 1911 MIME Voice Profile February 1996
systems.
The voice profile does not place limits on the use of additional
media types or protocol options. However, systems which are
conformant to this profile should not send messages with features
beyond this profile unless explicit per-destination configuration of
these enhanced features is provided. Such configuration information
could be stored in a directory, though the implementation of this is
a local matter.
The following are typical limitations of voice messaging platform
which were considered in creating this baseline profile.
1) Text messages are not normally received and often cannot be
displayed or viewed. They can often be processed only via
advanced text-to-speech or text-to-fax features not currently
present in these machines.
2) Voice mail machines usually act as an integrated Message
Transfer Agent and a User Agent. The voice mail machine is
responsible for final delivery, and there is no relaying of
messages. RFC 822 header fields may have limited use in the
context of the simple messaging features currently deployed.
3) VM message stores are generally not capable of preserving the
full semantics of an Internet message. As such, use of a voice
mail machine for general message forwarding and gatewaying is not
supported. Storage of "Received" lines and "Message-ID" may be
limited.
4) Nothing in this document precludes use of a general purpose
email gateway from providing these services. However, significant
performance degradation may result if the email gateway does not
support the ESMTP options recommended by this document.
5) Internet-style mailing lists are not generally supported.
Distribution lists are implemented as local alias lists.
6) There is generally no human operator. Error reports must be
machine-parsable so that helpful responses can be given to users
whose only access mechanism is a telephone.
7) The system user names are often limited to 16 or fewer numeric
characters. Alpha characters are not generally used for mailbox
identification as they cannot be easily entered from a telephone
terminal.
Vaudreuil Experimental