Using IRC for Electronic Meetings?
paenguin asks: "Our Linux User Group sometimes needs to hold Exec meetings, electronically. We have used IRC in the past, but it leaves us with a problem: there is no easy or built-in way to prove who is who. Do Slashdot readers know of a way to provide non-repudiation over IRC, or of another open source method of holding group electronic meetings where we can verify that everyone is who they say they are?" Wouldn't a private IRC server, with a combination of suitable IRC services (ala NickServ and ChanServe) and fairly restrictive policies, be one solution to this problem? How would you set up such a system? For those willing to brave the setup hassles, might some form of secure IRC also be an option?
You are in a board room. Its long, polished oval table and leatherette chairs are quite intimidating. A filter coffee machine bubbles quietly in the corner.
A Board Member is here.
A Chairman is here.
An Executive Directory is here.
An Axe is on the floor.
i-name =twylite [http://public.xdi.org/=twylite], see idcommons.net
we need more money
* Boss sets mode +b IT_Guy012*!*@*.*
* IT_Guy012 has been kicked by Boss (YOU'RE FIRED)
Frink: Nice try floyd, but you were designed for scrubbing, and scrubbing is what you shall do.