Lasana, do you know more about the relationship betweeen the technical sender of the email message (From:) and the attendee in the ics file who accepts the invitation (attendee)? Can they be different? Can other calendar systems handle that? I feel that the accepting person in the ics must always be the attendee, but the technical sender of the message might be someone else. Note that depending on scenario, I can receive an invitation for foo@bar.com (attendee & message recipient), which does NOT necesssarily mean that I have an identity with foo@bar.com set up (because foo@bar.com can be redirected on some other server, catch-all etc. to end up in a completely different Thunderbird account bar@baz.com).
Bug 1562896 Comment 25 Edit History
Note: The actual edited comment in the bug view page will always show the original commenter’s name and original timestamp.
Lasana, do you know more about the relationship betweeen the technical sender of the acceptance email message (From:) and the attendee in the ics file who accepts the invitation (attendee)? Can they be different? Can other calendar systems handle that? I feel that the accepting person in the ics must always be the attendee, but the technical sender of the message might be someone else. Note that depending on scenario, I can receive an invitation for foo@bar.com (attendee & message recipient), which does NOT necesssarily mean that I have an identity with foo@bar.com set up (because foo@bar.com can be redirected on some other server, catch-all etc. to end up in a completely different Thunderbird account bar@baz.com).
Lasana, do you know more about the relationship betweeen the technical sender of the acceptance email message (From:) and the attendee in the ics file who accepts the invitation (attendee)? Can they be different? Can other calendar systems handle that? I feel that the accepting person in the ics must always be the attendee, but the technical sender of the message might be someone else. Note that depending on scenario, I can receive an invitation for foo@bar.com (attendee & message recipient), which does NOT necesssarily mean that I have an identity with foo@bar.com set up in Thunderbird (because foo@bar.com can be redirected on some other server, catch-all etc. to end up in a completely different Thunderbird account bar@baz.com).