Julien <iul...@nom-de-mon-site.com.invalid> wrote:
>Adam wrote:
>>. . .
>>alt.* and other hierarchies are filled with unused newsgroups.
>Indeed, the list of the alt.* groups is impressive... I bet only a part
>of them are carried by well-administered news servers (the groups with
>traffic, or explicitly asked by their users).
During proposal review in alt.config, when there had been proponents,
they were told and told repeatedly that newgroup messages do not create
newsgroups, that News administrators create newsgroups. The decision is
made one News site at a time. Typically, an alt.* group gets created if
a user requests it, and won't be created lacking a user request.
>Anyway, it is up to each hierarchy (like de.*, uk.*, fr.*, the Big-8...)
>to manage their list according to the policy they wish.
>There's no obligation for any of them.
I will continue to point out that it's pointless busywork. Julien, I do
not agree with you that any good purpose is served by "simplifying" the
checkgroups, nor would the user benefit. There's always the possibility
that someone could try to revive an old newsgroup by, shockingly,
posting on topic, and that somebody else could see the article and post
a followup, also on topic.
Time and time again, we remind News administrators that if a seemingly
unused newsgroup is removed from a News site, then any posting history
and unexpired articles are removed as well. Sometimes users do look for
information in very old articles.
The only thing that's important is The Usual Advice, which has been
given since Usenet was new. Usenet benefits from users posting on topic.
The only thing that will save Usenet is regular users choosing to post
on topic in groups created to discuss topics they are interested in. One
never knows if a newsgroup can be revived until someone tries, by
posting an article on topic that someone else might post an on topic
followup to.
Nothing else is important. Removing groups or delisting groups from
checkgroups is irrelevant to saving Usenet.