Towertalk
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: [TowerTalk] mailing list etiquette

To: "Marlon K. Schafer" <ooe@odessaoffice.com>, towertalk <towertalk@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] mailing list etiquette
From: chas <chasm@texas.net>
Date: Mon, 11 Jan 2010 13:11:32 -0600
List-post: <towertalk@contesting.com">mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
Marlon K. Schafer wrote:
> Hi All,
> 
> As an ISP I have a bit of experience here so I thought I'd give back to this 
> group for a change.  (I'm on or administer 10's of lists and have been since 
> the mid 90's.)


I am not sure how being an internet service provider makes one an expert in 
NETIQUETTE... my suggestion is to go to RFC 1855 Rules of Netiquette and read 
these informal rules.  these are the basis of my list rules.


> 
> First, each list should have it's own published charter to fall back upon. 
> That charter should clearly state what topics of discussion are allowed.  It 
> should state some form of code of conduct as well.  These things not only 
> help the list membership keep on track, they also make it easier for the 
> moderator to step in when need be to either stop out of control threads, or 
> remove people from the list.


This is why I quote the RFC ... if that body of suggested rules is violated, 
then the perp CAN be removed or otherwise disciplined.
Most of my lists .. if not all, are moderated with a team of moderators who 
examine each message before allowing it into the corpus of the discussion.


> When posting, it's *generally* accepted that you should top post, not bottom 
> post, as it's easier for people to follow just the new portions of a 
> conversation.


this is plain WRONG!!  it is the sole reason why most people leave elists...

it leads to sloppy posting and extremely long downloads for those who prefer 
or insist upon receiving the verdampt 20 - 25 message  periodic collection 
instead of the single message which is far faster and easier to update.

Instead, Netiquette Rules [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netiquette]  state 
that you should strip/trim the quoted message (only one per reply) and enter 
your reply below that quote after removing the footers, sig blocks, etc. 
This keeps everything above the reply limited to one, quoted message and no 
old footers, etc. below your reply.  Bottom posting is THE DEVIL!  to quote 
Adam Sandler and Kathy Bates.

Again, I have only been running elists and before that, the pre-fidonet and 
quite ubiqitous BBS [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulletin_board_system] . 
After Al Gore invented the internet, the elist or email discussion list came 
about and nearly all BBSs were "ported" over to the internet.  Such is teh 
history of my oldest elist which once resided on a mainframe in Berkeley CA.

> 
> If a thread is getting long and you are commenting on one small part of it, 
> trim out the rest.  No one seems to do so, but adding a note that signifies 
> that you've trimmed out a section is a good idea as well.  (ex:  ***trim***, 
> before and/or after the section you've cut out.)

sigh, see the above.  ALWAYS trim out the excess or EVERYTHING which you are 
NOT replying to.  Quote only enough to allow your reply to make sense.  In 
fact, it is quite correct to "paraphrase" the idea(s) you are replying to and 
then continue on with your reply.  Keep it Short and Sweet.


<SNIP>

> Do NOT change topics without starting a new thread.  Especially don't reply 
> to an existing thread to start a new one.  There is information in the 
> headers (which are not normally shown to us but exist non the less) that 
> many mail programs or search mechanisms use to organize conversations.  If a 
> conversation does drift from one topic to another one, be sure to note that 
> in the subject line.  (ex: now favorite microphones -- was -- Morse code)
> 


the above is probably the most correct thing this person has emphasized in 
his lengthy message.   if you change topic in your reply, CHANGE THE SUBJECT 
LINE !!!


> On a personal note, this is the ONLY mailing list that I'm on that does NOT 
> reply to the list!  It drives me nuts.  I have to remember to hit reply-all 
> then take out the individual's email address etc.  And once I've done that 
> I've added yet another un needed email address to my address book that'll 
> also have to be cleaned up much more often.  Can we PLEASE standardize that 
> function?
> 


AMEN!

Thankfully, my email client  Thunderbird,  allows me to add back the name of 
the list by going to the address block and starting the name of the list. 
This is one reason I really dislike elists which are not on one or the other 
of the main list hosts such as Gmail and Yahoogroups.

fwiw

chas

-- 
chasm@texas.net   k5dam  Houston, TX

<a href='http://militarysignatures.com'> <img 
src='http://militarysignatures.com/signatures/member14013.png' border='0' 
alt='militarysignatures.com'/></a>

--
_______________________________________________



_______________________________________________
TowerTalk mailing list
TowerTalk@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/towertalk

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>