> *From:* uset...@stedtelephone.invalid (Paul Cummins)
> *Date:* Tue, 21 May 2013 20:10 +0100 (BST)
>
> In article <
REMOVEsteve.t.col...@192.168.0.139>,
> REMOVEste...@REMOVEgmail.com (Stephen Thomas Cole) wrote:
>
> > I was just wondering on whether the Comittee has an official line
> > on how they desire UK.* to progress?
>
> I'm going to wait for a few committee members to reply, before
> putting my
> reasoned response to this.
>
> Executive summary - I am in favour of contraction to an active core.
OK.
I've been using Usenet since at least 1998, and I still consider myself a
newbie among luminaries such as Clive Feather, Charles Lindsey and others.
Usenet has existed far longer, of course, since early 1980.
I've seen groups grow, i've seen them die, and I've seen the gradual
contraction of the number of group users down from the tens of thousands
to the tens of hundreds, certainly in UK. I've tried to create groups,
I've helped to kill some where required, and throughout this time, I've
taken an active role in UK.*
The thing about UK Usenet to me is this. We (TINW) are allowed a little
bit of a number of global servers, that we can call our own. We control
it, we manage it and we decide what goes on in it. This was initially
because BT, Pipex, Demon and a fourth provider were the biggest 4 Usenet
suppliers to the UK, and we (again, TINW) agreed with them to set up a
committee to manage this little bit of space on the Internet.
This happened back in 1995, so this is approaching 20 years of history.
And we manage this little bit of the Internet. We don't simply sit and
stagnate, we create, we destroy, we tend and nurture if needed. We, the
users of the uk hierarchy, manage the uk hierarchy.
This is why he have the Guidelines you appeared to have dismissed so
readily, this is why we have the group charters, the committee, Control
with his "magic" keys. And because we manage it, it is respected. We make
very few demands on the Usenet suppliers - a UK full feed amounts to
about 25MB a day - Tony keeps activity logs for the hierarchy, I don't
bother even though I take a full feed from several sources.
My first post to unnc was in 1999. I was using a different email address
then, now long since spammed to eternity, but still the same basic sig as
I do today. I note that my first ever committee election where I took
part was 2001, and that is the year when I consider that I became an
"active" participant in the UK Hierarchy. Along the way I have made
acquaintance with many people, some of whom I would like to consider
friends, none of whom I would consider genuine enemies, though there are
adversaries out there.
I have said before, there is no-one in unnc/m who I would not happily buy
a drink for, though there are some (very few now) who would not be
allowed to drink it.
This is, ultimately, a safe and friendly place. The fact I am a dog
doesn't matter. The fact I vanished, twice, without what some would call
"valid cause" doesn't matter. The fact I am a (insert preferred epithet)
doesn't matter. I am ultimately accepted as someone who wants to take
part, and my views are as respected, or derided, as anyone else's.
In my mind, this changed somewhat in 2009. I do not intend to rehash the
year, suffice to say that the Chiabal did not succeed in their
reverse-takeover, and the result is the URCM abortion.
I give you this little potted history of my Usenet experience to show you
in reasoned terms why I think your proposal is hasty, misguided and
ill-motivated.
Coming to your specific question now - the UK hierarchy should contract,
to focus the value of its users into effective groups that remain. There
is no point in diluting activity by setting up unnecessary moderated
groups. If you are offended by what someone does here, killfile them,
don't force other people to change their ways just because it doesn't
suit yours. UKRA works as it is.
Your RFD *is* a "build it and they will come" RFD but ultimately, they
are *not* coming to Usenet. You are firmly in the minority, as a relative
newcomer, and you seem to think that Usenet exists as the back-end of
Google Groups, or that it exists as the Front-End of usenet. This is not
the case, Google Groups does not add to Usenet, in the same way that
AOL's Eternal September of 1993 did not add to Usenet. A newcomer will
try both groups, find that neither is very active (only 80,000 licensed
amateurs in the UK) and leave again.
Many (groups and participants) have fallen by the wayside in this
hierarchy. Only a few remain. Please, remain, but do not try to make your
own, that which is our heritage.
Finally, the committee's job is to do as little as is necessary to keep
things running smoothly, not to actively promote or proscribe. I would
consider it a very successful year if the committee did not have to
actually announce anything other than the next elections.