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239 lines
8.9 KiB
Markdown
239 lines
8.9 KiB
Markdown
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### Receipts
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{{< changed-in v="1.4" >}} Added private read receipts.
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This module adds in support for receipts. These receipts are a form of
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acknowledgement of an event. This module defines the `m.read` receipt
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for indicating that the user has read up to a given event, and `m.read.private`
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to achieve the same purpose without any other user being aware. Primarily,
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`m.read.private` is intended to clear [notifications](#receiving-notifications)
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without advertising read-up-to status to others.
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Sending a receipt for each event can result in sending large amounts of
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traffic to a homeserver. To prevent this from becoming a problem,
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receipts are implemented using "up to" markers. This marker indicates
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that the acknowledgement applies to all events "up to and including" the
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event specified. For example, marking an event as "read" would indicate
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that the user had read all events *up to* the referenced event. See the
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[Receiving notifications](#receiving-notifications) section for more
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information on how read receipts affect notification counts.
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{{< added-in v="1.4" >}} Read receipts exist in three major forms:
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* Unthreaded: Denotes a read-up-to receipt regardless of threads. This is how
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pre-threading read receipts worked.
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* Threaded, main timeline: Denotes a read-up-to receipt for events not in a
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particular thread. Identified by the thread ID `main`.
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* Threaded, in a thread: Denotes a read-up-to receipt within a particular
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thread. Identified by the event ID of the thread root.
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Threaded read receipts are discussed in further detail [below](#threaded-read-receipts).
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#### Events
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{{< changed-in v="1.4" >}} Each `user_id`, `receipt_type`, and categorisation
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(unthreaded, or `thread_id`) tuple must be associated with only a single
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`event_id`.
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{{% event event="m.receipt" %}}
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#### Client behaviour
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{{< changed-in v="1.4" >}} Altered to support threaded read receipts.
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In `/sync`, receipts are listed under the `ephemeral` array of events
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for a given room. New receipts that come down the event streams are
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deltas which update existing mappings. Clients should replace older
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receipt acknowledgements based on `user_id`, `receipt_type`, and the
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`thread_id` (if present).
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For example:
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Client receives m.receipt:
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user = @alice:example.com
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receipt_type = m.read
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event_id = $aaa:example.com
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thread_id = undefined
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Client receives another m.receipt:
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user = @alice:example.com
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receipt_type = m.read
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event_id = $bbb:example.com
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thread_id = main
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The client does not replace any acknowledgements, yet.
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Client receives yet another m.receipt:
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user = @alice:example.com
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receipt_type = m.read
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event_id = $ccc:example.com
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thread_id = undefined
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The client replaces the older acknowledgement for $aaa:example.com
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with this new one for $ccc:example.com, but does not replace the
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acknowledgement for $bbb:example.com because it belongs to a thread.
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Client receives yet another m.receipt:
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user = @alice:example.com
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receipt_type = m.read
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event_id = $ddd:example.com
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thread_id = main
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Now the client replaces the older $bbb:example.com acknowledgement with
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this new $ddd:example.com acknowledgement. The client does NOT replace the
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older acknowledgement for $ccc:example.com as it is unthreaded.
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Clients should send read receipts when there is some certainty that the
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event in question has been **displayed** to the user. Simply receiving
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an event does not provide enough certainty that the user has seen the
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event. The user SHOULD need to *take some action* such as viewing the
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room that the event was sent to or dismissing a notification in order
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for the event to count as "read". Clients SHOULD NOT send read receipts
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for events sent by their own user.
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Similar to the rules for sending receipts, threaded receipts should appear
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in the context of the thread. If a thread is rendered behind a disclosure,
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the client hasn't yet shown the event (or any applicable read receipts)
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to the user. Once they expand the thread though, a threaded read receipt
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would be sent and per-thread receipts from other users shown.
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A client can update the markers for its user by interacting with the
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following HTTP APIs.
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{{% http-api spec="client-server" api="receipts" %}}
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##### Private read receipts
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{{% added-in v="1.4" %}}
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Some users would like to mark a room as read, clearing their [notification counts](#receiving-notifications),
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but not give away the fact that they've read a particular message yet. To
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achieve this, clients can send `m.read.private` receipts instead of `m.read`
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to do exactly that: clear notifications and not broadcast the receipt to
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other users.
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Servers MUST NOT send the `m.read.private` receipt to any other user than the
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one which originally sent it.
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Between `m.read` and `m.read.private`, the receipt which is more "ahead" or
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"recent" is used when determining the highest read-up-to mark. See the
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[notifications](#receiving-notifications) section for more information on
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how this affects notification counts.
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If a client sends an `m.read` receipt which is "behind" the `m.read.private`
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receipt, other users will see that change happen but the sending user will
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not have their notification counts rewound to that point in time. While
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uncommon, it is considered valid to have an `m.read` (public) receipt lag
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several messages behind the `m.read.private` receipt, for example.
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##### Threaded read receipts
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{{% added-in v="1.4" %}}
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If a client does not use [threading](#threading), then they will simply only
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send "unthreaded" read receipts which affect the whole room regardless of threads.
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A threaded read receipt is simply one which has a `thread_id` on it, targeting
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either a thread root's event ID or `main` for the main timeline.
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Threading introduces a concept of multiple conversations being held in the same
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room and thus deserve their own read receipts and notification counts. An event is
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considered to be "in a thread" if it meets any of the following criteria:
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* It has a `rel_type` of `m.thread`.
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* It has child events with a `rel_type` of `m.thread` (in which case it'd be the
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thread root).
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* Following the event relationships, it has a parent event which qualifies for
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one of the above. Implementations should not recurse infinitely, though: a
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maximum of 3 hops is recommended to cover indirect relationships.
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Events not in a thread but still in the room are considered to be part of the
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"main timeline", or a special thread with an ID of `main`.
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The following is an example DAG for a room, with dotted lines showing event
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relationships and solid lines showing topological ordering.
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![threaded-dag](/diagrams/threaded-dag.png)
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{{% boxes/note %}}
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`m.reaction` relationships are not currently specified, but are shown here for
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their conceptual place in a threaded DAG. They are currently proposed as
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[MSC2677](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-spec-proposals/pull/2677).
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{{% /boxes/note %}}
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This DAG can be represented as 3 threaded timelines, with `A` and `B` being thread
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roots:
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![threaded-dag-threads](/diagrams/threaded-dag-threads.png)
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With this, we can demonstrate that:
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* A threaded read receipt on `I` would mark `A`, `B`, and `I` as read.
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* A threaded read receipt on `E` would mark `C` and `E` as read.
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* An unthreaded read receipt on `D` would mark `A`, `B`, `C`, and `D` as read.
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Note that marking `A` as read with a threaded read receipt would not mean
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that `C`, `E`, `G`, or `H` get marked as read: Thread A's timeline would need
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its own threaded read receipt at `H` to accomplish that.
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The read receipts for the above 3 examples would be:
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```json
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{
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"$I": {
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"m.read": {
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"@user:example.org": {
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"ts": 1661384801651,
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"thread_id": "main" // because `I` is not in a thread, but is a threaded receipt
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}
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}
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},
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"$E": {
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"m.read": {
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"@user:example.org": {
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"ts": 1661384801651,
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"thread_id": "$A" // because `E` is in Thread `A`
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}
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}
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},
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"$D": {
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"m.read": {
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"@user:example.org": {
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"ts": 1661384801651
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// no `thread_id` because the receipt is *unthreaded*
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}
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}
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}
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}
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```
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Conditions on sending read receipts apply similarly to threaded and unthreaded read
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receipts. For example, a client might send a private read receipt for a threaded
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event when the user expands that thread.
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#### Server behaviour
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For efficiency, receipts SHOULD be batched into one event per room
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before delivering them to clients.
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Some receipts are sent across federation as EDUs with type `m.receipt`. The
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format of the EDUs are:
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```
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{
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<room_id>: {
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<receipt_type>: {
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<user_id>: { <content (ts & thread_id, currently)> }
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},
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...
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},
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...
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}
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```
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These are always sent as deltas to previously sent receipts. Currently
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only a single `<receipt_type>` should be used: `m.read`. `m.read.private`
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MUST NOT appear in this federated `m.receipt` EDU.
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#### Security considerations
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As receipts are sent outside the context of the event graph, there are
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no integrity checks performed on the contents of `m.receipt` events.
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