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Open Source, Closed Talk 173

I've attached an interesting rant below. It comes from Larry Marso and talks about the trends of content moving off USENET and onto Web sites like Slashdot. Usenet sort of automatically grants the right to distribute, but the Web isn't necessarily like that. (As a side note, among the many features planned for Slashcode is an NNTP gateway, which will hopefully address this problem, as well as allow people to use it to read Slashdot ;)
Larry Marso writes "The trend of Linux-related discussion and development moving off USENET and mailing lists and on to Web Site "forum" facilities is disturbing. It is bad for the open source movement and the future of Linux. VA Sourceforge is a case in point.

Internet users who "post" articles using USENET or mailing lists are inherently granting third parties the right to repackage and retransmit their words into various formats. For example, Deja and Remarq take the legal position that they have the right to rate, sort, emphasize and discard USENET posted content, and retransmit what they consider "best", without obtaining any license or permission from the authors of the content. Seems perfectly reasonable, even to their legal departments and investors!

So long as Linux related discussions take place in such open forums, third parties have wide latitude to do the same, potentially adding a lot of value -- identifying highly relevent and instructive postings, questions asked and answered, tips for new users, a record of new ideas and suggestions and more. Enter a site like VA Sourceforge. True, they are providing all sorts of value added services. An open source project conducted there has certain advantages. The general discussion forums there too, may be useful. However, in each case, the participants are asked (in the legal "terms and conditions") to grant the Web site permission to use the forum content, but no permission is requested or accepted on behalf of third parties.

The bottom of every page says "Forum comments are owned by the poster. The rest is copyright VA Linux Systems." Remember that the GPL may apply to code, but it's irrelevent to talk. If I see an insightful discussion taking place on the Web site, or in the site's archives months after the fact, I can't take it, package it, sort or filter it, and retransmit this in another form or medium. Not unless I go back and obtain permission and a license from *each and every participant* in the discussions in question. So, in an important sense, VA is taking ownership of the content; no one else will be able practically to get the rights to reproduce, recycle and extend the content. Open source, but "closed talk".

Is there a solution? Yes. A quick and direct solution would be for a site like VA Sourceforge to permit users to obtain any and all contributed content an automated mailing list facility. Just asking users who are posting content for the right to retransmit, if done properly, could move us back to the status quo ante. However, I suspect they won't, because they want the site traffic. There is potentially a lesson here for Slashdot as well. I suspect that I can't take what's posted at Slashdot and retransmit what I might consider "best" like I could, for example, with the Linux kernel mailing list, can I? This whole trend toward Web site forums and facilities is leaving significant, valuable intellectual property rights in the hands of companies valued in the billions of U.S. dollars, and rendering it uneconomical for others of us to get the rights ourselves. Potentially, this is denying the Linux community valuable future resources.

To provide copies of useful information I'd seen at these sites, I'd practically have to construct an elaborate Auctionwatch or Bidders Edge system, and point people to links at VA Sourceforge or Slashdot. (And then what, will the sites respond with lawsuits like eBay?) Until these sites establish new policies of collecting intellectual property rights for the whole community, instead of just for themselves, some of the most exciting and important content in this "new era" for Linux is no longer open to all -- certainly not the way we all mean when we say "open". "

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Open Source, Closed Talk

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    news2html does something simular although it's not quite finished yet. news2html [suso.org]
  • by Anonymous Coward
    "UseNet" is a dumb name. No wonder newbies don't learn about it. It sould be renamed. Maybe somethin with the word "chat" in it, like "Post-Chat" or something. That'll help, I bet.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    The US copyright law is very clear in this regard. The author of the post holds the copyright. Reuse of the material (in documentation, for example), requires permission from the author. The author does not give away his copyright on the material by posting it to USENET. Thus, the problem of ownership of content does not change by going to web based forums. Unless the site explicitly states that submitted posts become the property of the site, the author retains ownership.

    I think the gripe originates from the fact that when a post is made on a web site rather than via USENET, the post remains located on a single server which has an owner and the right to drop the post if they want to. In USENET, once the article makes it to your NNTP server, you can choose to archive it and process it for as long as you want. (e.g, Deja.com) Holding the post and displaying it in the context under which it was posted does not violate the authors copyright since it was he who put it there to begin with. This is why Deja.com isn't in trouble. (Their choice to filter out posts is no different than an individual setting up a killfile.)

    If anything, I would argue that the web gives us the opportunity to change the rules on what can be done with a post. It gives the web site owner the chance to tell the poster who owns what and for what purpose BEFORE the post is made (unlike USENET).
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 06, 2000 @01:33PM (#1300263)
    Let's say that Slashdot posts a story about some controversial issue, like, say, deCSS.

    Some Anonymous Coward writes a moving, compelling manifesto against the MPAA-- concise, easy to comprehend, with easy steps one might take to fight them.

    If only the general public would read this post from Anonymous Coward-- why, they'd undestand the issue, their hearts would melt, and public sentiment rally against the dictatorial Valenti and his ilk.

    Now, let's say everyone wants to repost this moving article on their web site. Can they do it, legally? Do they have to ask the original poster for permission to print it in its entirety?

    And if the author was an Anonymous Coward, how could they ever get permission? What then? Maybe the open content (http://www.opencontent.org [opencontent.org]) license could be applied to all postings or something (?)

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 06, 2000 @02:40PM (#1300264)
    This whole debate is very interesting,
    and I am watching with some worry.

    In USENET, ppl contribute, their help
    , ideas, flames etc, without any sort of
    monetary reward for doing so.

    The news server you use does not generate
    revenue per article read or anything like
    that for the company or individual who ran it
    either.

    Slashdot however generates moey for the ppl
    running it, or their company whatever, by
    every page impression/view that happens.

    Every time someone reads a discussion,
    the hits go up, and in this new wacky economy
    you read the ad, you might generate some
    revenue.

    If Slashdot, starts mirroring the discussions
    on NNTP, its my true hope that they will
    NOT add stupid ads etc to the disussions but
    sticking true to the old school USENET style,
    and ONLY replicating content.

    However, how will Slashdots admins, or their
    parent company feel about loosing perhaps
    30% (over estimate I am sure) of the page
    impressions if the discussion are bidirectionally
    replicated to NNTP. That means less ads seen
    less revenue.

    Slashdot a while back started publishing their
    headers via XML, for some reason they update
    it very rarly compared to their frontpage.
    This is natural since they want ppl, they want
    you, to look at their front page, and earn them
    money.

    They dont really want to give you the content
    without having to go through it.

    I will be pleasantly suprised if Slashdot sets
    up a bidirectional real time replication to
    NNTP without any banners though I doubt it
    will happen.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 06, 2000 @01:10PM (#1300265)
    I would like a fresh bowl of Slashgrits [geocities.com] poured down my pants.

    Thanks you.
  • While pushing /. discussions out to NNTP is a fine and worthy goal, I hope they don't replicate NNTP posts back.

    The signal-to-NataliePorter ratio is bad enough already - adding the volume of USENET spam would be a bad move...
  • Or will you just killfile the ACs?

    That sounds reasonable to me. I think the moderation has helped to cut down on the amount of garbage most people see, but I feel the best kind of moderation is the kind I can control myself.


    --
    Making iDirt 1.82 a safer place, one bug at a time.
  • I have to agree. This is one of the funniest pages I have seen in quite some time. Someone at /. should have run this as a real story, or at least a quickie.

    On another note, I am glad the moderators moderated this up. Maybe they do have a clue.

    Ontopic- I dislike this idea that you retain rights to your comments after you post to a open forum. As long as someone doesn't modify your content, it should be free to rebroadcast, IMHO. Maybe I am missing the point here.

    Again- check out slashgrits. very funny.

    ed
  • Me previously:
    ---
    The idea of getting /. discussions mirrored on to an NNTP server is the greatest idea I've heard in a long time.
    ---

    I think auntfloyd raises several worthwhile issues following my enthusiasm for an NNTP mirror to slashdot discussions. I also think they all have reasonable answers. Let me just suggest my own preferred answers to each (if it happens, the great Taco can ultimately make the decisions he thinks are best).

    | How will moderation work through a newsreader?
    | Or will you just killfile the ACs?

    I would suggest leaving the From: field as indicating 'Anonymous Coward' where it was. Most newsreaders should be able to filter on the From: field... and if someone wishes, she can killfile that From: value.

    | And Slashdot is ad-supported. How would that
    | work in an environment like Usenet?

    Well... text ads in sigs are one thing. But like another poster said, the ads aren't exactly a *feature* from the POV of discussants. Personally though, I'm not suggesting the NNTP mirror to completely replace /., but just as an adjunct. I would still probably want to read the articles first in a browser, and then look at selected threads in my (more flexible) newsreader.

    Btw. I think the arrangement of broad categories should be in terms of the same broad categories stories fall into. So there might be newsgroups like: slashdot.rights-online, slashdot.BSD (and so on). That way I could subscribe to only those groups that most interested me, but not bother with the others.

    | And what about user accounts? And wouldn't
    | using Usenet open it up to a lot more spam than | we've ever seen before?

    I would think there would certainly have to be some automated moderation criteria for accepted posts via the NNTP gateway. Another poster suggested a PGP signature, but I think that would be overly cumbersome. Better might be a special header field (X-user-account: ?), which might not be unbreakable, but would certainly eliminate the more-or-less random and blanket spam. Or maybe even more forgiving of less versatile newsreaders would be to require a special form of the Subject: field ( Re:Please, please...). This special form could be stripped out before it made it to an actual post, but it would similarly eliminate blanket spammers).

    | I could see using a single, centerally-
    | controlled NNTP server (or set of servers)
    | which would me modified to disallow posting to
    | the discussions, so that you could read
    | Slashdot via a newsreader, but not post.

    That's a possibility, but I don't think it's necessary. I *do* think that the aim should be a specific hierarchy on a limited set of machines, rather than an RFC for a whole new hierarchy. But lots of companies and organizations host their own private hierarchy... and that pretty well has the same advantages of general Usenet groups.

    But as indicated above, I think posting could be automatically moderated by the types of means above. The moderation of a post provided via NNTP would still have to occur via the regular web page (or possibly via an email-robot, using Message-ID's and appropriate moderation codes). But a suitable X-user-account: should be able to post just like that same person could via the web-board (with the same karma, etc.).

  • The idea of getting /. discussions mirrored on to an NNTP server is the greatest idea I've heard in a long time. I sure hope this improvement makes it.

    I first started reading /. in mid-1998, which puts me fairly near the start of the usage curve. My user # is certainly in the top 10%, and by now maybe in the top 1% (this is hardly to brag: I only contribute to threads occassionally, and have only a moderate karma thereby).

    Anyway, one of the main hesitations I had in spending much time on /. at the beginning was that the discussion capabilities were *SO FAR* behind the Usenet in terms of speed, usability (in my favorite news client), archivability, searchability, and in all the other things that make NNTP great. Over the last year, /. has added some nice features (the moderation, for a big one). But even still, it doesn't come anywhere close to Usenet in terms of convenience. (slashdot is still occassionally way too slow, and there is no way to browse discussion, respond, etc. offline).

    This was discussed recently in the "death of Usenet" thread, and I guess a lot of correct points were made there. But I really think the *open* and distributed format of NNTP is the very best thing the internet has created. It is open in a lot of ways, too. The discussion is inherently public (if not unambiguously "public-domain") in a way even /. style boards are not. And it is an open standard that allows everyone to have their favorite newsreader that encorporates all the features they find most useful (again unlike a web-board). News feeds are easily searchable plain-ASCII, which is wonderful (which web-boards are not, even for comments posted as ASCII).

    A distant second here would be a majordomo or listserv type mirror of /.. But all else pales next to NNTP.
  • Anyone who would stop posting because of a public release isn't really interested in the discussion anyway.

    I am a frequent poster in some mail list. Years ago, the moderator decided that it would be great to resend everything to an equivalent newsgroup.
    When I read this, I have already sent some messages. They were on Usenet by then. I started to receive spam on that account and it's still going. The list is available to consult on Egroups and Reference, so redistribution is not the issue, unless it's done improperly and you can't trust everybody.

    If Slashdot-like sites plan to redistribute content, they should allow to choose wheter you want your personal contribution redistributed.
    --
  • How can you know that some content is not being eliminated?

    You can only know about what is published :)

    Lots of dictatorships have allowed controlled criticism, and even encouraged it (Campaign of the 1000 flowers, by Mao). This gives people the illusion of freedom, and helps locate the dissidents.

    Not that I am saying that [CENSORED] would do it, but they could.
    --
  • Oh come on, Robin. The license clearly states you have to mark up your changes as coming from you. You aren't allowed to put words in other people's mouths.

    Bruce

  • Not in this context, but I ran it by a lawyer about 10 years ago in the context of software licenses. It's possible for one party to grant an independent copyright to another and then two parties have copyrights to the same thing. It works out a lot like dual-licensing by a single copyright owner.

    Thanks

    Bruce

  • All right, it's not really Robin, it's a Robin poser with "_" at the end of the login. I objected to CT about these things and he felt it was immoral for him to act to prevent identity theft. That's not my idea of journalistic ethics, but it's CT's sandbox.

    Bruce

  • by Bruce Perens ( 3872 ) <bruce@perens.com> on Sunday February 06, 2000 @03:13PM (#1300276) Homepage Journal
    Technocrat.net [technocrat.net] content from 1999 is available for your use under the Open Publication License [opencontent.org], with none of the options selected and with the publisher's name as "TECHNOCRAT.NET".

    To do this I used a rather unusual publication policy, as far as I know I've invented it:

    By submitting this article you grant Technocrat.net a separate and independent copyright to your posting, and you keep your own copyright. That means that you can do anything you wish with your posting, and so can we.

    That allows us to apply a license to the postings after the fact.

    However, this doesn't address the complaint, which is that Usenet sites seem to have a more liberal copyright policy that allows them to be filtered and presented differently by various web sites, and weblogs like Slashdot and Technocrat do not. I'm not sure that stands, legally. The Usenet doesn't demand a particular copyright and the default if you don't copyright your posting would be All Rights Reserved.

    Thanks

    Bruce

  • I've thought about this problem a bit myself. One of the things we're working on for the Citadel [citadel.org] BBS package is NNTP support directly in the server. Combine this with the text and web front ends that are already in place, and connectivity is universal.

    Now I'm not saying that everyone should use Citadel, but putting support for popular message exchange protocols in all such products should be the norm. It allows for non-UseNet NNTP networks to emerge.

    Yes, I said non-UseNet. While UseNet has a lot to offer (for example, lots of opportunities to make money fast and virtually unlimited pay-per-view pornography), there exist people who have a different idea of how a large distributed messaging network should be run. For example, there used to be a lot of people who preferred FidoNet over UseNet. And those of us on the Citadel network still enjoy the online company that's far more 'folksy' than UseNet.

    Now here's the important point that I hope will get this post moderated up. As recently as five or ten years ago, it would have been foolish to connect your NNTP to anything other than UseNet, because many people only had UUCP connections, or some other low-grade means of connectivity to the outside world. But here and now, everyone's got TCP/IP to the open Internet. What this means is that multiple, smaller, NNTP networks is a real possibility. They can be operated by groups who have varying ideas of how it should be run, varying target audiences, etc. Since everyone has TCP/IP now, you simply point your newsreader at the network(s) you are interested in.

    Yes, I really do think that 'one big UseNet' is an obsolete idea, and that's why it's deteriorated so much.

  • It seems to me that every OSS license has this sort of provision already.
  • As someone has already said, Usenet is all about community. Being able to clickey-click to someone's home page is nothing - what makes the community is the regulars, the newbies, the in-jokes, the recurring threads, the shared histories and so on. You can put a brief bio on your user page, but compared to actually talking to people that gives away relatively little.

    If all you're seeing is what you desciribe then I'd suggest trying some of the more social groups - fan groups tend to that, for example. There's a lot of rubbish and quite a bit of hostility in places, but then there's an awful lot of different kinds of people out there and you can probably find groups for all of them on Usenet.

    As far as HTML goes, the main reason it's frowned upon is that it generally adds only minimal value to a posting and presents a great many opportunities to make a posting difficult or impossible to read. Pretty much all the useful things can be represented in plain text anyway. The fact that it's also incompatible with most of the existing clients is just the nail in the coffin.
  • What's on Usenet varies - there are some dead groups and spam-filled groups like the one you describe, but there are also an awful lot of active and vibrant groups out there. Writing off the entirety of Usenet based on one group is foolish. For whatever reasons some groups are still-born or die off or just have a kind of people you don't get on well with (in the case of distributed computing, you'll probably find that historically a lot of that discussion has gone over mailing lists).

    Your news provider can also make a difference - even a small effort to clean spam from the feed can make a big difference - although the main thing is usually the presence of a set of active regulars.
  • I'd say the admin load was pretty much the other way around - news servers have got to be the easiest things out there to admin (providing you don't try to handle all the binaries or anything silly like that). It's extremely hard to make a running news server fall over completely (particularly now you get things like CNFS). Something like /. would seem to require more work on the part of the admins.

    If you're thinking of moderated groups, then you're right although for that very reason I'm not always sure I approve of moderated groups. For client-side moderation (ie, killfiles & so on), Gnus' adaptive scoring solves most of the problems for me and there's always NoCeM and GroupLens if you want global moderation (I don't really).
  • "mnidlessly" eh?
    And you do proofread?
    rof, lol
  • Here in the US, any form of publication (email, books, pictures) is considered the property of the originial publisher, whether this is stated or not.

    The copyright can be given up, or changed to the copyleft, but only at the discretion of the originial publisher.

    In the strictest sense, this also applies to USENET. It has never been legal to use another person's writing without crediting/reimbursing them.
  • Finding a FAQ is very, very easy. You have a choice between the well laid-out archive on ftp://rtfm.mit.edu, or searching Dejanews for groupname+FAQ. Most FAQs are also mirrored on the web, so check google as well.

    If none of these techniques works, then you can feel quite justified in posting "My foobar is broken, and why isn't your FAQ in any of the regular places?"

    Finding out about the person who made a post on Usenet is the same as it is in slashdot. If someone chooses to give away nothing about themselves, you'll learn nothing. If someone decides they want people to know more about them, they'll put their website in their .sig.

    Usenet isn't moving to the web. There's nothing inherently better about the web as a medium for discussion. If there's one thing slashdot has demonstrated, it's that it has exactly the same life-cycle as any Newsgroup that starts off cool, and then finds popularity, trolls, dick-size wars, and People Who Just Don't Get It.

    The only difference is that VA Linux can't buy a newsgroup. Conspiracy theorists would see a significance in this, and the fact we've had two "Death of Usenet" articles on /. this weekend.

    Charles Miller

    --
  • There are many, many methods of moderation on Usenet.

    Scoring killfiles are a God-send. Once you've read a newsfroup for a few months, you can tell who is most likely to produce content, and score them up, and score down those more likely to produce noise. Don't have enough time to read the entire group today? Doesn't matter, the cream should have floated to the top of your newsreader. Just read down the list as far as you want, then bin the rest.

    The other "plus" of this method is that you know when you load the group and there's nothing with a positive score, it's time to move on and find somewhere else to amuse you.

    The most similar to /. moderation would be "nocem". nocem messages are advisories in which any reader of Usenet can list message-IDs that they either consider a must-read, or that they think should be immediately trashed.

    The difference is that you can verify the source of a nocem using PGP, and you can choose which moderators you trust.

    This would dispose of most of the complaints about ./ moderation. Choosing between standard discussion, or Natalie Portman posts would simply be a matter of choosing which moderators you trust. Moderators can mark as many posts as they want, even their own, in discussions they're taking part in. If you find the moderator is moderating badly, all you have to do is remove their key from your trust file.

    This is also something that couldn't be implemented on a web-based forum. Dealing with such fine-grained moderation preferences would bring the site to its knees. The beauty of Usenet is that aside from the spam-filtering, the rest of the work is done by the client, so you can set up your own moderation to your own preferences.

    Usenet isn't dead. It's not even dying. Web based forums are incredibly clumsy in comparison, and only good for short-lived discussions.

    Look at slashdot for an example. Unless you get in the first hour or two after a topic is posted, the chances of having your post read, or responded to is minimal. The chance of carrying on a discussion that lasts more than a few hours is almost non-existant - everyone will have moved on to the next topic.

    On Usenet, on the other hand, discussions can go on for days, weeks, months, years, or occasionally forever. Those who are interested in the thread will continue to read it, those who aren't will just score it down or killfile it, and move on to something new.

    I'd like to see how a slashdot/NNTP gateway would deal with this obvious change in mentality would be interesting. Expiring posts after 24 hours would be the obvious, if brutal solution.

    Charles Miller

    --
  • Just an idea...

    If Slashdot ever does get its own news servers, then how about the ability to add non-Slashdot-related newsgroups?

    Non-Usenet newsgroups such as slashdot.tv.simpsons, slashdot.comp.linux.games, slashdot.sci.astro etc could be very popular if they are virtually spam-free and only accessible to people who know about them.

    Kind of like a Usenet 2...

    Ford Prefect
  • by trims ( 10010 ) on Sunday February 06, 2000 @01:14PM (#1300287) Homepage

    In both USENET and the various discussion Web sites, the comment poster owns the copyright, so, technically, you should have to get permission to redistribute in either case.

    Due to the nature of USENET, it can reasonably be assumed that the poster allows redistribution freely. However, there definately is untested waters for services that "package" USENET postings and then resell them, since they are using the original copyrighted material in methods that could be argued are different from the implied "license to distribute". Now, no one has challenged this in court, and hopefully, no one will, since it seems to be a good arrangement for both sides, and it would hurt everyone involved. Everything I just said about USENET seems to apply to mailing lists, too.

    The major problem with Web sites is the lack of easy-to-access archives of material, not the legality of redistribution. Yes, technically, you should ask for permission to redistribute, but that's the same as under USENET. It's a matter of perceptions. The problem sited here is that 3rd-parties can't get at the archives in an efficient method to do repackaging. This is a problem, and one I'm not sure is easy to solve.

    However, it's also a problem with mailing-lists: if the list maintainer doesn't make a digest or archive available, it's not easy to get back articles. Sure, you can subscribe and get everything from that moment on, but you don't get "back issues".

    I don't really know what the answer is, but at least it doesn't seem to be a legal problem.

    :-)

    -Erik

  • Here's a way around the problem (for all those that still view .sigs)...
  • One reason fewer and fewer people are using usenet is that it's easily spammed.

    What do you propose to do when slashdot joins the thousand of other usenet topics that are slammed with junk?

    Idea: Make the newsgroups read-only. I'm no NNTP expert, but could it be possible to have stuff originating from the web posted to the newsgroup, but disallow posts originating on usenet? But then, how could on-the-fly moderation be reflected?

    Maybe just have a slashdot archive on usenet. Let people come here if they want to post something.

    Dunno..
    W
    -------------------
  • <i>Are you reading the same /. I am? The signal/noise here is already much worse than, say, comp.lang.c++.</i>

    When not moderating, I read at a threshhold of 0, ordered w/highest scores first, and I have to say, considering the number of participants here, I don't get much crap until the very end, and there I'm less meticulous anyway.

    In other words, the shit does sink to the bottom fairly quickly.

    TMO anyway,
    W
    -------------------
  • That doesn't sound very non-exclusive.

    Why do otherwise reasonable people let their lawyers put stupidity like that in? It just makes them look bad. What are they going to do, sue me because I told Epinions I like my VCR, and I also told Slashdot readers? Sure.

  • I certainly would not want people putting wors in my mouth, would you? That is what I mean: no more, and no less.

    I agree with your statement about such a thing allow others to put words into someone else's mouth, but if you find such a thing so distasteful, why do you do that very thing to Roblimo (the real one)?
  • Many people (including myself) were worried when VA purchased Andover (and Slashdot). It seemed likely that criticism of VA on Slashdot would become muted, or even non-existent. However, this fear seems not to have come true. This feature seems to be highly critical of VA, and even of Slashdot itself (although /. is not mentioned in the article). While this is not likely to permanently supress fears that CmdrTaco will make editing decisions while looking at his stock portfolio, it seems at least reassuring. Kudos to /.
  • Newsgroups failed because there is no moderation. Your discussions of your favorite topic can easily be drowned out by spammers, flamers, and other assorted idiots.

    It seems as soon as any discussion moves beyond "a few friends and I" it always degenerates into a form that requires moderation... thus the rise in easy-to-moderate web bulletin board type systems and moderated mailing lists.

    The most difficult part of the new moderated discussion world is to find moderators who don't abuse their powers.

  • I'm surprised to see no one has commented on this already. I'm sure there are many SF project admins on /., aren't there?

    "Internet users who "post" articles using USENET or mailing lists are inherently granting third parties the right to repackage and retransmit their words into various formats. [snip] So long as Linux related discussions take place in such open forums, third parties have wide latitude to do the same, [snip] Enter a site like VA Sourceforge. True, they are providing all sorts of value added services. An open source project conducted there has certain advantages. [snip]"

    From the admin area "help" for one of my lists there... ("formatting" courtesy of lynx-ssl)

    nntp_host Option nntp_host (gateway): The Internet address of the machine your News server is running on. The News server is not part of Mailman proper. You have to already have access to a NNTP server, and that NNTP server has to recognize the machine this mailing list runs on as a machine capable of reading and posting news. The Internet address of the machine your News server is running on. [1]_______________________________________________ ___

    If pre and /pre tags were supported on /., that would have come out okay. Hint, Rob.

    The point here is, the NNTP gatewaying mechanism is already in place,) as well as the archiving of past messages in with a public or private method,) if the project admin chooses to take advantage of it. And the gatewaying can be configured to go in either direction or both, if desired.

  • There are several problems in the implementation of mailinglists and newsgroups that can be worked around on the web that makes those "old" services less desirable when it comes to using them.

    Yes, it's nice that VA sponsors that soundforge work, but when it comes down to it, VA does like to keep a good deal of control over the work of it's sponsored projects, because when it comes down to legal liability, they don't want to be stuck in a corner, as do any other company that sponsors these projects.

    What do I see as a solution? Not the abandonment of web forums, because they tend to be much more effective when implemented correctly (admittedly, most of them suck right now ;). But sponsorship without control. Don't count on this happening though. With Linux being the new bandwagin to jump on, corporations want a flauntable piece of the pie, something that they can control and do whatever they want with. Until the need for greed wears of in a couple of years, expect open-source collaboration to be very rocky, with the buisnesses that contribute the least to be making the most noise and stirring up the most bullshit.

    (Slashdot does not condone the use of it's users saying the word "bullshit")

  • I'm not sure whether the act of moderation could be accomplished via NNTP or not...if it were just done via the web browser, I could see an "X-Moderation-Threshhold" header, altered in the actual article on the server when someone marks a message up or down on the webpage. (I'm assuming that Slashdot would use a single NNTP server model, like SFFnet and others.)

    For the ads, I could see a Deja/Sexzilla-style "advert-.sig" being added to the end of each comment. I have to note, though, that any web site that depends on banner ads for its revenue is fooling itself; I use Junkbuster and only RARELY view Slashdot ad banners--and I expect a lot of Slashdotters do the same. My computer's screen is my property, and I want as few banner ads taking up space in that property as possible--not to mention the extra time it takes them to crawl down my 33.6 modem line.
  • Don't be silly.

    Every how-to type bulletin board has the exact same problem. Newcomers invariably fail to read/search past postings or FAQs, even when there are clearly defined links that say "READ THIS BEFORE YOU POST".

    The web is just more idiot-friendly than usenet.
  • One of my favorite Terms and Conditions is the postings policy at www.epinions.com: ... "you automatically grant to epinions.com (or warrant that the Content owner has granted to Epinions.com), a nonexclusive [emphasis added], royalty-free license to use, modify, copy, distribute, transmit, publicly display, publicly perform, publish, adapt, create derivative works of, distribute, transfer, or sell any such Content, for any purpose whatsoever, including, without limitation, a commercial purpose, without any compensation to you; and (ii) you agree that you will not publish, submit, or display such Content to or on any other web-site or on-line service (except your own personal web-site) without Epinions.com's prior written consent. [emphasis added, but unnecessary!]

  • Am I making sense here?

    Impeccable sense.

    Still, I would ask the question, do you utilize mailing lists? Do you put a license statement below that authorizes just a single redistribution, or limits redistribution to a fixed number of hours or days? If not, you are subject to a possible legal interpretation that redistribution and perhaps archiving is anticipated in the ordinary course, and hence authorized.

    Do you would ask that several hundred thousand users give up their rights to their comments, just to participate?

    No. What seems to be happening here is that users are retaining rights to single items of content which have little value standing alone, but arguably significant value as a part of a collection of items --- postings by other users in threaded forums. (VA Linux paid a billion US dollars for Andover.net, which counts Slashdot among its assets).

    The status quo of majordomo mailing lists and (moreso in the past) USENET has been the whole basis for the open source movement.

    The emergence of significant commercial players in the Linux field is a relatively new phenomenon. Its impact is not yet know. You could easily argue that the new order will destabilize many of the relationships, operating procedures and interactions that have been critical to the track record of development and online "volunteer" user support. I don't mean to launch into a discussion of game theory here, but there are reasons to doubt whether fueling the Linux fire with cash necessarily will advance development of the OS. (I'm working on a paper on this subject).

    At the very least, the movement to "closed talk" is going to concentrate significant information assets in the hands of the commercial companies, where they have never been before in open source. If the commercial companies didn't think this was likely, they just wouldn't be in the online forum segments of the Linux market. As another user put eloquently here, the movement to web hosted forums, with the typical "nonexclusive" license, actually guarantees the the Web site (aka Sourceforge or Slashdot) will be the only ones who can economically sort, filter, rate, and selectively present the content. No 3rd party will be able to collect up comparable rights, practically.

  • Absolutely! The T&C is posted as an example of what many users would find unacceptable, if not absurd. But it is buried in the fine print read by few of the participants.
  • by lsmarso ( 17248 ) on Sunday February 06, 2000 @01:22PM (#1300302)
    Larry Marso here, again. A few words were dropped from my posting, leaving some ambiguity.

    I am proposing that Slashdot and VA Sourceforge immediately make available their web hosted forums via a majordomo style mailing list, with every participant at the web site giving up as many legal rights as any participant in any mailing list. Permit users access to the full ascii content of whatever is posted to forums via e-mail, without ever having to visit the site (except maybe to sign up).

    Different 3rd party "mailing list archiving" sites, which use html interfaces (ugh), already take the position they have the inherent right to be one more manner of the redistribution contemplated by the mailing list method of moving content around.

    One can squabble about whether this would hold up in court, but let's move back to status quo ante: put web hosted forums on the same playing field as majordomo mailing lists.

    This is a much more direct solution than writing a new GPL something or other licence, although maybe that would be useful in the longer term.

  • Ummm...paraphrasing is still considered plagiarism. Whether or not this form of plagiarism can be proved to be a flagrant copyright violation is up to the lawyers.

    FWIW, the fine print says that the posts are owned by the original posters, which means that they (Andover.net) are divesting themselves of all copyrights to the posts.

    Oh yeah...IANAL.

  • Ummm...something like this is completely unnecessary. (IANAL)

    The "fine print" in the green bar above the comments states that "The following comments are owned by whoever posted them."

    This means that Andover.net is divesting itself of all copyright to the comments. Since the original posters own the comments, copyright release would have to come from the original posters.

    Now, I believe that I have read somewhere that it was either USENET or bulletin board postings were ruled by the courts to be "reasonably assumed that redistribution is granted" due to the nature of such. I would assume that this would also apply to Slashdot postings, but there is really precedent for it, since Web postings aren't actually redistributed by several different sources the way USENET postings are.

    Of course, it makes matters worse if I do something like this:

    Copyright (C) 2000 by Rob A. Shinn. All rights reserved. Unauthorized redistribution is a violation of applicable laws.


    Now can you redistribute this post or not? This is left as an exercise to the reader. :)

  • How about changing the default license 'all comments are copyright of the author' to: All comments are in the public domain, unless otherwise is stated in the comment?

    BTW, is it me or is /. terribly slow today?

  • Having a disclaimer that says, "Comments are owned by the poster," is a little different than a website claiming control over all the content on the public forums at the site. Having posters release the copyright to their posts into the public domain would make it easier to compile lots of posts about a given topic and redistribute the collection. That's about the only benefit I can think of. And really, if someone is going to take the time to compile something like that they should have enough energy to rewrite and paraphrase the whole thing and just cite the sources. That is legal no matter who owns the copyright to the comments.

    -Nathan Whitehead

  • What do you propose to do when slashdot joins the thousand of other usenet topics that are slammed with junk?

    I think an NNTP interface to slashdot would mean that slashdot ran its own NNTP servers, separate from the rest of Usenet. Registered users could log in with their slashdot username and password to validate their posts (NNTP allows this, ISTR), otherwise you'd be an AC. The posts could then be duplicated on the website. To read, you'd need to connect to the slashdot news server, rather than your own. (That said, it might be a nice idea to pass a read only version to Usenet: make it moderated to ensure it doesn't get spammed, make the moderation address an auto-response bot telling you that you need to go to a particular NNTP server or the site to post).

    Moderation would still only be possible via the website. You could put moderation scores in X-headers, as someone else has already suggested. Changed moderation levels should be instantly reflected in the articles served by the slashdot NNTP server. This requires the ability to change the articles in place though, which means that any mirror to Usenet would not track these changes (I'm not really keen on using supercedes for this): one reason for reading on the Slashdot servers.

    Since it'd be slashdot's own group (possibly their own heirarchy) rather than part of usenet, the format for postings could be HTML if this was desired: no one on Usenet can get picky about this if the rules for the group/heirachy allow it.

  • If Slash is getting a gateway, does that mean we are going to get killfiles for reading the pages? To be clear, will I be able to add usernames of other people to a list, and then never see their comments again? That would be nice.
  • by Dacta ( 24628 ) on Sunday February 06, 2000 @01:17PM (#1300310)

    Bruce Perens' site, techoncrat.net has packaged all last's years content & comments and made them available (somewhere - I couln't find a URL)

    Bruce, if you are reading - what's the licence, and do you require permission of the comment posters to make their comments available for redistribution?

  • Mailing lists are frequently gatewayed(sp) to Usenet and I often use Deja to search those Lists. That's very convienent because it lets me search many different lists all at once rather than one at a time. It seems like a natural extension of this to build gateways into web based discussion forums as well.

    Alternatively, I'll bet one could make money by setting up a web site that collected and searched all known web forums and a provided a Deja like front end. Obviously you would get sued eventually but lets face it, these issues ARE going to be tested in court sooner or later anyway. Hopefully anyone who tries this will incorporate before getting started to provide some liability protection.
  • "If someone is going to take the time to compile something like that they should have enough energy to rewrite and paraphrase the whole thing and just cite the sources"

    Compiling lists of posts on a given topic can mostly be automated but so far as I know paraphrasing is something computers arn't too good at yet. I submit Bablefish as exibit A! Also, how long would it take a human to go through an entire day of /. and summerize and index each post?
  • USENET has a number of problems, starting with the picky nature of its users. While it can do HTML to present an opinion in rich text, it is frowned upon.

    Suffice it to say that some of us consider that a good thing. How many people here on /. use html for anything special and how many just like to use bold every 10th word. There is however nothing to stop any given Usenet group from allowing or even encouraging html.

    In the case of a /. -> Usenet gateway html probably would have to be allowed. I for one would be willing to live with html on that group and maybe even embeded banner adds. in exchange for the advantages of usenet (searchability, scorefiles, speed etc.).
  • "How will moderation work through a newsreader? Or will you just killfile the ACs?"

    If it were a moderated news group then all postings could be sent to slashdot and then passed on to the news group. When you sign up with /. they could send you a pgp key to sign your posts with. Any post without a key would be an AC. Likewise, when you had some moderator points to spend they could mail you a key (or just insist that you use the web for moderation). Since /. would be doing the actual posting, they could add an X-score header or whatever and your news reader would deal with that however you told it to.
  • If I post to a weblog like Slashdot via a server in the US from a client in the UK, what copyright law applies?
    If my post goes via another country on the way, what law applies?
    If I post to a UK USENET server that then redistributes my post across the world, what law applies?

    In other words, discussions of the US copyright law are only the start of the whole issue...

  • I understand that USENET has it's positives, but it's not the actual USENET that I have a problem with, it's the model. The current model requires a great deal of maintenance by relatively few individuals as compared to the /. model of little maintenance from a lot of users. I'm not writing it off because I don't like it, I most sincerely do. I've found it to be an extremely useful tool. The problem is that the moderation is weak and the user base is relatively small. Most people don't even know that USENET exists (which is, I believe, why the proliferation of porn there has been allowed to continue). You're right on the mailing lists for dist comp, though. I'm in one...Hey, all interested in dist comp, check out Lightbulb on Sourceforge [sourceforge.net].
  • Do any of you who've replied to my original post even remember USENET when it was good? Say, back in 1994? Compared to then, it sucks...

  • I'm sorry I have to be the one to say this, but USENET sucks. I've used it to varying degrees of success, and certainly obtained and published my meager knowledge of Linux, but by and large, USENET is spam and porn.

    I've recently become interested in distributed computing, and looked on USENET for a dist comp group. I did find ONE, with about a dozen messages in it. About three of those messages were valid. The other 80% was divided equally betwixt spam and porn.

    Sites like Slashdot, while not providing the same forum as USENET, (i.e. I cannot just post on /. my inane Linux questions), but /. does provide a publicly moderated forum for discussion. In many ways, /. is better than USENET, one, because it is moderated by the members of /. and therefore not subject to the whim of a single USENET moderator, and two, /. ACTUALLY GETS MODERATED. Many usenet groups I've seen cannot keep up with the garbage that is posted there. /. moderators eliminate the Natalie Portman troll posts almost as quickly as they are posted.

    Also, with the /. moderation scheme, the moderated messages are not actually removed, they are just lowered to an ignorable level. The burden of the moderation is on the /. community, and I have to say that the /. community has gone above and beyond the call of duty on this one! Good show, give yourselves a pat on the back!

    And let's not forget the ability of the /. community to moderate the moderators. I occasionally find a comment moderated down that shouldn't be, and have the priviledge of being able to do something about it.

    I've never seen a better public forum than /., so don't make it out to be an evil that it isn't.

  • i sell computers and internet, and run into this ALL the time.
    any idea's on how to correct this?


    nmarshall
    #include "standard_disclaimer.h"
    R.U. SIRIUS: THE ONLY POSSIBLE RESPONSE
  • How about changing the default license 'all comments are copyright of the author' to: All comments are in the public domain, unless otherwise is stated in the comment?

    I don't really think that would work out. I wouldn't really want people using my words without giving me credit, and I don't imagine too many other people would either. Perhaps a BSD like licence instead, just requiring credit to the orignal author when redistributing would be in order, though.

    I don't do sigs.
  • Twister by bCandid Software (the guys that helped build deja.com) is just such an animal. I have been looking for good discussion board software for more than a year, after hosting a community of users for the last six years.

    It's basically an NNTP to HTTP gateway. We are just beginning testing.

    Dave
  • Whether or not this form of plagiarism can be proved to be a flagrant copyright violation is up to the lawyers.

    If there's no more than a minimum amount (say, a sentence at most) in common between the two, that can't be copyright violation. Copyright can only be applied to writings, and not to the information/opinions contained within those writings.

  • While I agree that copyright laws are necessary to protect the interests of authors, and comments are technically covered under this, the original intent of copyright laws are to protect the profits of the author so he/she can make a living from writing.

    Is anyone here making a living by posting comments to slashdot, and need their livelyhood protected?

    Do we need to introduce a "not for profit" clause allowing redistribution? (so as to protect sites like slashdot from being plundered for their comments?)

    hmmm.
  • ok, since you say you use it all the time, I'll ask. I've been curious since I saw the feature (I miss the gnus mailing list), but not enough to actually set it up. Does it just randomly create a new group for each story? Do they go away when the story does? Do new posts show up in all of the active groups every time I hit 'g'? I thought I read that the new stories show up as zombies...doesn't that suck? what does gnus use for the group name?

    The way I decide whether to read a story is the little text blurb (this is why I find the slashdot nightly mail of headlines to be vaguely useless). Is there some facility that lets me read these before going into a group?

    I love gnus. Lars rocks! it's just that reading slashdot with a web browser is a no-brainer, and I'm not sure how well it maps to gnus.

    convince me. (if you wish)

    thanks,
    Michael

    (Doh! I almost just pushed C-c C-c to post this ;-)
  • I think this is a technical issue. It /would/ definately be great to backend weblog-like frontends with traditional "open" communications mediums like USENET. I wouldn't get on VA's case too much. They /do/ have mailing lists. I don't think anybody is intentionally attempting to appropriate or make it difficult for others to access discussions. It is just a technical matter of /how/ to "open" it up.

    I think it is just a matter of integrating communications mediums. I think XML has a great potential for facilitating this.

    Jazilla.org - the Java Mozilla [sourceforge.net]
  • But that still doesn't address the problem of how to keep the content open. "E-Babble" sounds great to me, but such a catchy name somebody will probably trademark it, and then restrict the use of their content, and we'll all get upset because speech wants to be free, right?

    Besides, all news users believe that "The World Wide Web" *IS* the internet, right? ;)

  • The great thing about services like Deja (I still want to call it DejaNEWS) is that they provide a centralized location for searching archives.

    The great thing about Usenet, in my opinion, is that it is distributed, and thus free.

    With all the talk about Usenet dying, it seems that maybe what is needed is just a better front-end. You can post to Usenet from Deja, for example, and don't really need to know that its usenets. Imagine hundreds of sites that exist as frontends to usenet, but each provides a specialize service.
  • not to mention telnet or derivitives like IRC, MUD, etc....
  • > Make the option avaliable to all (AC and those
    > with accounts) and, voila! Problem solved.

    Dumb question:

    How can an AC enforce the GPL-equivilent? "I posted that, I swear to the mother mary!"
  • USENET has a number of problems, starting with the picky nature of its users. While it can do HTML to present an opinion in rich text, it is frowned upon.

    If you're suggesting this is a Slashdot-to-NNTP problem, then they can just convert stuff to plain text. If it bugs you that you can't, that's different. Deal with it. :)

    As for the FAQ stuff, it's not hard to search the web for a newsgroup FAQ. A lot of newbies won't know what FAQs really are, of course, but that's not usenet's problem, and really not it's responsibility. The FAQs are a service to the regulars more than the users, and dumb questions (in help groups) usually get answered (it's the weird ones that aren't in the FAQs nobody can answer :). Q&A groups aren't all of usenet, anyhow.

    Forums based on Slash or UBB feel more like communities. If you're interested in the person who made such-and-such a comment, there's an easy way to find out who/what they are -- you just click the link to their user information, and if they want to share anything, they've put it into their forum profile directly or by a link.

    Reading that Sylvia likes fireplaces, long walks on the beach, and cute puppies doesn't make you part of the Playboy Magazine community. Talking to Sylvia and all her (ahem) friends comes closer to qualifying, in my book.

    Usenet feels a lot more like a bunch of people talking to each other than anything like Slashdot. A small town vs., say, Los Angeles..

    Usenet is moving to the Web because the interface, content, and interactivity can be done better there.

    Usenet is moving to the Web because people know how to use the web (not to mention that it exists).


  • i think Slashcode offering an NNTP gateway would only be logical. the threaded topic web-work-alike was a great move to gain popularity and is invaluable when i'm off of my machine, but less than optimal for when i'm using /. at home or work.

    i guess if this comes to fruision, i'll have to write a news-reader that's actually worth a shit.

  • The whole point of posting to a forum is to release your memes on the collective consciousness.

    sounds unsanitary.

    ======
    "Rex unto my cleeb, and thou shalt have everlasting blort." - Zorp 3:16

  • Speech is NOT software. Speech, written or spoken, is about perception. How many of the dear people, God love 'em, would notice those changes posted at the bottom? How many would even think to look? Giving someone else ownership and control of your words is far too chancy.

  • It'd be nice to have some Napster-like distribution and retrieval system of USENET/forum postings for those of us constantly connected and willing to give up a few gigabytes of hard disk space for the 'net's sake.

    --LP
  • i am really getting tired of these stupid idiots writing in.

    I am not saying that meta-moderation saves lives or anything like that but I for one really enjoy reading insightful comments from people that generally know alot more than me on many subjects.
    For the past 4 or 5 times I have do it at least one of them has been something like this

    Ho hum........

    I suppose me writing in isn't going to do anything
    just that I am getting sick and tired of these fucking idiots. If you guy's want to go and jerk off somewhere there is plenty of other places......
  • Regardless of whether my comment is my copyright or the public's, I wish new sites would focus on creating their own content, rather than recycling old comments from another source.

    Don't get me wrong, I do like the idea of a user checking a box next to his/her comment, which would make it available to the public. It would then be useful to allow developers the option to download all "public comments" in one click. Either a CSV file or XML would allow easy integration into whatever database system is being used.

    However, I just hope that future web projects will focus more on the creation of their own, new content, rather than re-hashing and re-filtering material from another site. Just as we don't need a links page pointing to another links page, we don't really need comments from comments.

    There's plenty of code out there to easily build your own Slashdot. So hopefully developers will think "new content" first, and "import content" second.

  • Actually, I think a mailing list backup of online forums like /. would have many of the characteristics we would like NNTP style for. And there is open software for managing mailing list archives that give capabilities at leasts as good as news readers.

    Some things should be quite easy to add in. Like the ability to auto-respond to a non-anonymous poster who has that feature turned on. One thing I don't understand about most online web forums is why they are so limited. It would not be that difficult to write one that had a message content pane at the bottom and on top a message list showable in different ways like subject tree, dated list, from list and so on. Yet none of the online forums to the best of my knowledge have done even this much. Without such elementary capabilities there really should be a tie-in to email-NNTP in order to be able to filter, review, search and manage the information.

    I am not totally convinced that NNTP is "the way". I think it is time for something new to be born. But I am bit fuzzy on what that is.

  • I just got wind of this. It seems a web service for reading Usenet will be highlighting keywords within the articles displayed through their site with links to advertisers who have purchased that service. The press release from the service itself is here [remarq.com]. It is high time to start digitally signing everything with either PGP [mit.edu] or GPG [gnupg.org] and licensing it only for unaltered redistribution.

    This comment is licensed under the OpenContent License (OPL) Version 1.0, July 14, 1998. [opencontent.org] The relevant paragraphs concerning modification are as follows:

    2. You may modify your copy or copies of the OpenContent or any portion of it, thus forming works based on the Content, and distribute such modifications or work under the terms of Section 1 above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions:

    a) You must cause the modified content to carry prominent notices stating that you changed it, the exact nature and content of the changes, and the date of any change.

    b) You must cause any work that you distribute or publish, that in whole or in part contains or is derived from the OC or any part thereof, to be licensed as a whole at no charge to all third parties under the terms of this License, unless otherwise permitted under applicable Fair Use law.
  • Circa 1991 or so, he was like the king of internet porn on usenet.

    I can't either confirm or deny that. Until about a year ago, my Usenet feed was somewhat filtered. All I know is that he was a regular poster to a number of newsgroups, and that he made the suggestion that I posted a link to.
  • by dsplat ( 73054 ) on Sunday February 06, 2000 @01:42PM (#1300340)
    Elf Sternberg, an long-time personality on Usenet, anticipated some of the growing problems with it and has put this proposal [halcyon.com] on his web site for a distributed solution. It is worth reading, especially in light of the idea for a Slashdot/NNTP gateway.

    This article may be copied and distributed under the terms of the OpenContent License (OPL) Version 1.0, July 14, 1998. [opencontent.org]
    • If you have a basic question for alt.foo.foobar, how do you find the FAQ?

    Every new Usenet user should be directed to read, or at least be aware of, the Informational Post in news.lists.misc. This should direct you to how to find a FAQ for most groups.

    If this doesn't help, once you are aware of the existence of FAQs, only the greenest Internet Newbie wouldn't think to try a handy Web Search engine to look for "alt.foo.foobar +FAQ".

    If this doesn't locate the FAQ, then there probably isn't one and the Newbie should ask the question anyway.

    Now, there still exists the problem of ISPs/Universities/(Other Organization that gives Usenet access) that don't direct Newbies to the most basic information.


    -Jordan Henderson

  • Awww jeez...

    Here we go again. This guy isn't Roblimo.

    He's RobLimo_ User #146994

    The Roblimo we know and love is user # 357

    Keep this in mind when you respond to him...

    Here's my [redrival.com] copy of DeCSS. Where's yours?
  • "with every participant at the web site giving up as many legal rights as any participant in any mailing list."

    So you would ask that several hundred thousand users give up their rights to their comments, just to participate?

    I, for one, would not participate if I did not have that choice avaliable to me. I would also resent it if ever Rob did such a thing.

    "This is a much more direct solution than writing a new GPL something or other licence"

    We probably wouldn't need to write a new GPL something. In my original comment, I suggested something HTTP specific (called it the SlashComment Public License). It would appear that the open content license [opencontent.org] could be easily modified to serve this purpose.

    "put web hosted forums on the same playing field as majordomo mailing lists."

    I would argue that there's enough of a difference between the two to call for a different license/redistribution structure. The biggest difference, IMHO, is that web forums allow you to be totally anonymous. With a maling list, you aren't totally guaranteed anonymity by virtue of having to have an email address to participate. If I wanted to badly enough, I could probably trace your email address back to you. With Slashdot, I have no such ablility.

    Therefore, I would propose a slightly different structure. Just as you have the ability to pop in and post to /. as an AC, so should you have tha ability to decide what is done with the comment you just submitted.

    Am I making sense here?

    Here's my [redrival.com] copy of DeCSS. Where's yours?
  • by zantispam ( 78764 ) on Sunday February 06, 2000 @12:33PM (#1300344)
    ...those `GPL for Books' kind of licenses?

    Combine that with an option below the Comment window (like Slashdot's) to `Include comment in SCPL (SlashComment Public License)'. That way, the poster still owns the comment *and* gives permission for others to use it in a manner consistant with the SCPL.

    This would also allow people to opt in and out, legally, and at will. Make the option avaliable to all (AC and those with accounts) and, voila! Problem solved.

    This would also make things easier for posters. Remember the _Jane's_ happening? There were people who were quoted and not given credit (at first. IIRC, all of those problems got sorted out). With something like the SCPL, the license writers could include a clause that made it mandatory to give due credit.

    The best part about this is that it's a vouluntary system. Since it's a contract that you knowingly enter into, there's no problems with comments beig `stolen', taken out of context, or abused.

    Comments?

    Here's my [redrival.com] copy of DeCSS. Where's yours?
  • I would have expected that /. uses a news system AND majordomo to give alternate access to /. .

    But now by searchig the "clickable" areas I see
    that there is no way to register to a THREAD as mail reader nor as news reader either.

    Interesting how deep the unix/linux FREAKS have sunck :-)

    I'm waiting for the side wich gives full access to all ways of interaction.

    AND not to be of topic: the right always belong to the creator!
    Most authors reusing usenet post ASK the posters about permission!
    It's just a matter of politeness, I will never use
    anyones creations without explicit permission in public (I can't remember to have done so in privacy).

    Regards,
    angel'o'sphere
  • Slashdot is great news site, but (IMO) it's forums are a bad usenet wannabe. I can choose my newsreader. I can even write my own (or find someone else to do it) if I can't find one I like. I can tailor a newsreader to my likes and set up the most complex filtering criteria. If slashdot breaks, no discussion. If one usenet server breaks, the rest of the world can continue. How about turning the slashdot discussion board programs into a news reader pointing at one particular thread in an appropiate newsgroup? (I'll help!) Bill, likes usenet, lots.
    Have you tired Gnus with nnslashdot? Gnus is the premier newsreader for GNU emacsen, and has a nnslashdot backend which will download a discussion for you and then allow you to read it more or less as though it were a newsgroup, with all the usual goodies, such as scorefiles etc. Thanks to w3 (the webbrowser for emacsen) it will also grok the HTML tags that slashdot uses. As far as I know, the only thing that you can't do that you wouldn't want to use the web for anyway is spending moderation points. It's great, and I use it all the time, though not right now. 8-(
  • Actually whenever the muse hits me. I find that a nice all purpose representation of informative data is the best cure for what I need.
  • Well if I want something from slashdot I do the following.
    1. Get a number of floppy disks. Usually even with maxium stories displayed on the main page and even with things like perhaps Linux goes commercial and abandons the GPL I can get all of slashdot's extended stories on 5 or so floppies at max.
    2. Save the context via a decent browser (Netscape and IE both have their faults for overall indention and including of ^M characters and other bad things and lynx dosn't allow for the typical indention of comments via nested mode)
    IE 5 is actually good for the aboive because it automatically includes the title of the page for easy index. Spill over and the next page problem is solved with a simple appending of a numberal that is the same as the page in question (ie Slashdot News Linux goes commercil and abandon's the GPL1.txt "2.txt "3.txt .. "99.txt etc)
    3. Filter this through a program similar to col with cat blah1.txt | col -b >newfile-without-control-characters.txt
    4. Read the comments.
    Now this dosn't allow for the use of responding to various comments and such but if I want an archive of all of the ranting and raving on slashdot it is a very nice thing.
    Now how di I solve the problem of citations and such? Simple if you paraphrase something it usually works well enough.
    Now I actually think that from an access point of view that the use and collection of info using a web browser is actually more fail safe and better than usenet. Usenet is something that is not guaranteed from a services offered perspective from each and every ISP. Some ISPs have a bigger spool some only keep stuff for 24hrs. I know of some ISPs that only provide a simple IP address and you do everything else (even without mail). I most of the time don't use USENET because of it's inherent lack of accessibility and uneven resource distribution. You can flame me all you want but even slashdot partly agrees with me as there was posted a little sotry a couple of days ago about usenet dieing because people don't care. This type of a forum is quite nice.
    Now I pose a question to all of you. Suppose I did take information from slashdot and paraphrase each and every comment (no I really don't think that many people care about post the first or dousing heated grits down my trousers or a fossilized version of Natalie Portman would be interesting). Would anyone be able to honestly say that slashdot-terminal or anyone else didn't actually know all that stuff?
  • by LocalYokel ( 85558 ) on Sunday February 06, 2000 @02:18PM (#1300349) Homepage Journal

    USENET has a number of problems, starting with the picky nature of its users. While it can do HTML to present an opinion in rich text, it is frowned upon.

    If you have a newbie/basic question for a newsgroup, there's a chicken and egg problem. If you have a basic question for alt.foo.foobar, how do you find the FAQ? You're stuck with the choice of two stupid threads: "Where's the FAQ?", or "My foobar is broken". The former is the best choice of course, but it kind of lessens the usefulness of a FAQ, because someone still has to reply, and hopefully they won't flame you with RTFM's, too. The latter is also likely to get you the link, though it may get you a few extra flames. While I haven't seen it implemented, the web interface can preemptively point someone in the right direction before they start a "junk" thread.

    Forums based on Slash or UBB feel more like communities. If you're interested in the person who made such-and-such a comment, there's an easy way to find out who/what they are -- you just click the link to their user information, and if they want to share anything, they've put it into their forum profile directly or by a link.

    Usenet is moving to the Web because the interface, content, and interactivity can be done better there.

  • MacOS Rumors [mosr.com] as an example uses the "Open Content" license, with details at the bottom of their site. I think this is a possible answer for posters and readers, and it is indeed essentially a "GPL for Books".
  • Your claims are utterly stupid. Go use AOL. Usenet will never day as long as serious computer users are around.
  • how about "italk" or "ethreads" or "netbabble".

    Then it could go public (or at least get some VC; the biz folks love names like that), and could do some marketing.
  • More generally, nntp seems like a special case for topical discussions, whereas http & html can do everything that usenet can, and more since it's a more general protocol and interface.

    The big disadvantage, as someone pointed out, is that it's centralized. At least a particular forum is, like slashdot. I don't know how else it could work though, and there are advantages to that even.
  • Hmm it seems to me that all this is.. is a well...rant. He trying to make some play on Free speech when there isnt even an issue.
    Take for isntance documentaries, like on the Discovery channel. I they just piped out the data recorded raw right into the audience it wouldnt make for a good, or even informative show. If a comapany is going to spend the time to moderate and filter out the crap from public domain speech and put the data they feel important on their media then more power to them. Anyway that is what people have done for years, the media never correctly portrays the full scope of any particular subject, just what people want to hear.
    Hell even Slasdot does it. So again I ask what is the point of this article..... none really, its just some guy blowing crap out his mouth trying to sound pretentious and just, when he is probably just out for personal glory....
  • There are two avenues for open-source project communication on SourceForge: forums and mailing lists. Only the site-wide forums get any real traffic (the ones pointed to by the home page), and most projects rely on mailing lists instead. It is far easier and time-sensitive to receive periodic discourse in your e-mail inbox than having to log in to a site every day. I've disabled all but the developers forums on my SourceForge projects, and these are a special case, in that they are private, for the use of project developers only. Hard to imagine VA Linux getting into the business of republishing private forum content.

    By the way, there has been some discourse at SourceForge on uniformly gatewaying the hosted mailing lists to a newsgroup hierarchy, similar to what Debian does with their mailing lists. No response on this idea yet from SourceForge personnel.

  • by jjsaul ( 125822 ) on Sunday February 06, 2000 @01:08PM (#1300370)
    The whole point of posting to a forum is to release your memes on the collective consciousness. Anyone who would stop posting because of a public release isn't really interested in the discussion anyway.

    So the answer is simple - a public release and redistribution license accepted by hitting the "submit" button. Part of it could be the user id attached in any redistribution.

    On another point - anyone know of a political discussion board using the /. moderation structure?
  • Slashdot is great news site, but (IMO) it's forums are a bad usenet wannabe. I can choose my newsreader. I can even write my own (or find someone else to do it) if I can't find one I like. I can tailor a newsreader to my likes and set up the most complex filtering criteria. If slashdot breaks, no discussion. If one usenet server breaks, the rest of the world can continue. How about turning the slashdot discussion board programs into a news reader pointing at one particular thread in an appropiate newsgroup? (I'll help!) Bill, likes usenet, lots.
  • It's the next version of Internet Relay Chat (IRC). Starting with IRC v2.3, (being released in March), the product will known as Intelligent Internet Relay Chat, or IIRC, due to its next-generation chatroom features. Look for it to be bundled with Windows 2000.
  • by btempleton ( 149110 ) on Sunday February 06, 2000 @09:44PM (#1300383) Homepage
    Back around 1989, I wrote a short history of USENET and made fun of all the people who kept predicting for years that it would soon die. I ended up coining the phrase "imminent death of the net predicted" in the history.

    But today I've joined the doomsayers. The net won't die, but it's already in decline, finally for real, but for a long time simply compared to the web. You see USENET was growing, but it wasn't growing nearly as the net itself. During the 80s it grew faster. Now all the mindshare belongs to the web, and more and more people think of web boards like /. and others as the place to go for online conferences.

    Too bad because frankly they suck in most ways, including /., compared to a good newsreader. I rarely read the boards here. It's too slow, too cumbersome, even over a fast link. My newsreader is an order of magnitude faster.

    So much better yet it manages to die, while Andover gets valued at 800 million dollars (or whatever) of VA Linux Stock. Why?

    Many reasons, but prime among them resistance to change. USENET is the example of open source at its worst. To change and evolve, it needs the cooperation of *everybody*. It's hard to lead, and no matter what you do, there will be more people who will think it's a bad idea. Every new suggestion is met with "Go to the web to do that" or "Go start your own hierarchy."

    Well, I did start my own hierarchy once. It's not easy, and it's stupid it should be necessary to do something new.

    I helped start the usenet-format IETF working group to help improve the USENET standard. It's been going for over 2 years and gotten nowhere. There are perhaps 2 or 3 new features in it, all because I pushed for them, but frankly nothing. Because of the need for too much agreement there is no change.

    USENET people fear the web and the internet as the enemy when they should embrace them. Slashdot works because doing it on USENET would be hard. USENET still lacks real support (other than robo-moderation) for the idea of short-term, moderator-created topics that are within themselves unmoderated, or retro-moderated. That's how almost every online service and BBS has worked for a long time now.

    USENET people fear the web because of the things that are wrong with the web -- it's too pretty, to inefficient, requires permanent connectivity -- but in turn they reject all the good it has to offer.

    The last new feature in newsreaders was MIME, which is almost 10 years ago, before the web. One new feature in 10 years? 10 Internet Centuries they would now call that.

    Even though over 50% of users now read with Netscape or Outlook Express and can do full MIME and HTML, even good uses that don't involve the feared abuses of the web are shouted down if people try them. Even somebody like myself, a reasonably respected old hand and moderator, has trouble suggesting new things. If I can't do it, I don't know who can.

    I've about given up on the usenet-format working group as a means to improvement. My battle cry at the end was that we bring USENET into the 90s before they were over. Start-of-Decade-debates notwithstanding, I lost.

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