A signature block (often abbreviated as signature, sig block, sig file, or just sig) is a block of text automatically appended at the bottom of an e-mail message, Usenet article, or forum post. This has the effect of "signing off" the message. A common practice is to have one or more lines containing some brief information on the author of the message.
Information usually contained in a sig block includes the poster's name, phone number, postal address and email address, along with other contact details if required, such as URLs for sites owned or favoured by the author. A witty or profound quotation is often included (occasionally automatically generated by such tools as fortune), or an ASCII art picture. Strict rules of capitalization are not followed (example, it is very en vogue to write "tel" instead of "Tel" to designate telephone). Among some groups of people it has been common to include Internet_self-classification_codes, though the practice is waning.
The formatting of the sig block is prescribed somewhat more firmly: it should be displayed as plain text in a fixed-width font (no HTML, images, or other rich text), and must be delimited from the body of the message by a single line consisting of exactly two hyphens, followed by a space, followed by the end of line (i.e., "-- \n"). This latter prescription, which goes by many names, including "sig dashes", "signature cut line", and "sig-marker", allows software to automatically mark or remove the sig block as the receiver desires. A correct delimiter is required for a news posting program to receive the Good Netkeeping Seal of Approval.
However, whether due to ignorance or disregard for these guidelines, a great many people use sig blocks that are either formatted improperly or larger than these suggested dimensions. In past decades, such practice was referred to as warlording, named for one particular Usenet regular who openly flouted the guidelines with sig blocks stretching to many hundreds of lines of ASCII art on messages with little or no relevant content.
Many corporations have internal policies requiring outgoing emails to have lengthy "signatures" appended to them, listing dozens of contact methods, disclaiming legal liabilities, notifying of virus scanning methods, and so forth. These corporate signatures are almost universally large (often larger than the message itself), and composed without regard for the netiquette guidelines described above; they are seen as obnoxious and irritating by many who receive them.
The use of top-posting (with fullquoting) compounds the problem by causing messages to have ever-lengthening tails of garbage hanging off their end, as various corporate disclaimers, ads from free mail services, mailing list footers, and the like get added.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Signature block".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world