On Sat, 2 Feb 2019,
pru...@riseup.net wrote:
> I have been thinking of joining qubes users for long time but am put off
> by large number of threads being hijacked.
> It is bad etiquette to hijack somebody elses thread - see wikipedia
> entry here
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etiquette_in_technology
> "....avoiding multiposting, cross-posting, off-topic posting, hijacking
> a discussion thread, and other techniques .....".
...That's very selective quoting from you ;-). Perhaps it is a tactic to
deflect attention away from the previous sentence on that page? ;-)
> Many times hijacking is used by a minority, as tactic to deflect
> attention away from or avoid answering the original
> question/comment/query.
That's a quite bold claim. While I could agree that many discussing might
not know an answer (if there even is a question in the thread), stating
that it's being done on those purposes you claim is quite an arrogant
one, IMHO.
Also, often this kind of spinoffs seem occur with discussion rather than
clear questions threads so it seems just naturally way discussion works
(and yes I know, some oppose natural way how natural discussions work
because they want to _dictate how others_ are allowed to participate in
public discussions).
There are plenty of counter-examples to your claim when a thread has
a clearly defined technical question. But if there isn't such a question
made, then it's an open loop really and your "avoid answering" part
doesn't really apply.
> Me thinks the qubes user community works better if they control tighter
It would be nice though if people would change the subject when they
clearly spinoff but I can understand it's often hard to draw a line or
realize that the discussion has drifted off far enough to warrant that
so the problem is likely to stay.
--
i.