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I also agree with T.Rob. Intent is just part of the process.
Figuring out what you want and formulating intentions best happen in
the context of information about what options are available and how
they differ in ways you may care about. Why, by the way, should we need to identifiably communicate intent to (and share data with) vendors with which we will end up not transacting? That seems a side effect of schemes that rely upon direct communication between would-be 'buyers' and would-be 'sellers.' As I posited in my recent 'As They May Choose' post, the services of anonymizing intermediaries might obviate that problem, while also supplying useful network effects. Marc On 12/17/2013 12:40 PM, Alan Mitchell
wrote:
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