I will comply, because that appears to be Randi's preference too, as expressed in the guidelines for the stage magic subforum, and I'm a guest here.
Personally, though, I think such trumped-up pseudo secrecy concerning basic principles of stage magic, which are available for free in books found in any public library, is ridiculous, if not outright wrong. Scientology and stage magic are the only two disciplines that endeavor to enact this sort of secrecy of basic principles, outside of all established intellectual property law, maintained (however ineffectually) by bogus self-serving etiquette rules and legally null "oaths," for commercial benefit. (By which I don't mean the benefit of professional performing magicians, whose acts are no more impeded by general knowledge of basic principles of magic than appreciation of professional baseball players is reduced by teaching kids to play baseball, but the commercial benefit of the rather sleazy retail amateur magic business, whose ability to charge $6.95 for a folded xeroxed sheet of paper in a plastic bag depends precisely on the etiquette of "nondisclosure."
Respectfully,
Myriad