390 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
390 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
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Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!news.media.mit.edu!uhog.mit.edu!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!howland.reston.ans.net!news.cac.psu.edu!news.pop.psu.edu!news.pop.psu.edu!not-for-mail
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From: barr@pop.psu.edu (David Barr)
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Newsgroups: alt.config,alt.answers,news.answers
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Subject: So You Want to Create an Alt Newsgroup
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Supersedes: <alt-creation-guide_767368981@pop.psu.edu>
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Followup-To: alt.config
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Date: 10 May 1994 10:03:03 -0400
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Organization: Penn State Population Research Institute
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Lines: 372
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Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
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Expires: 28 May 1994 14:03:01 GMT
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Message-ID: <alt-creation-guide_768578581@pop.psu.edu>
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NNTP-Posting-Host: bosnia.pop.psu.edu
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Summary: This is a guide for anyone interested in creating a newsgroup
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within the alt.* hierarchy. It is posted every 14 days.
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Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu alt.config:23202 alt.answers:2767 news.answers:19363
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Version: $Id: alt-creation-guide,v 1.23 1994/04/12 14:11:15 barr Exp barr $
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Archive-Name: alt-creation-guide
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There are no Guidelines or Rules for creating alt groups. There is no
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one "in charge" of the alt hierarchy. The key to creating a successful
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alt newsgroup depends only on convincing the thousands of news
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administrators across the globe to carry your newsgroup. Here are some
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tips that will help you achieve this.
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This article is based on common-sense and real-life experience. This
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is not an attempt to codify rules or guidelines for alt, but merely a
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guide to help people get the most out of alt, as well as a reflection
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of some established procedures.
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This guide is split onto three parts. The first part covers some
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technical background as to why alt is the way it is, and how it fits
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into the larger Usenet.
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The second section lists many common reasons proposed alt groups are
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rejected. Some are technical, and some are philosophical.
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The third section includes some miscellaneous suggestions on making
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your alt group achieve the widest audience possible.
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This guide is also available on the World Wide Web at:
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http://www.pop.psu.edu/~barr/alt-creation-guide.html
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You can also get a copy by sending e-mail to "majordomo@pop.psu.edu"
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with the line "get file alt-creation-guide" in the body of the
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message.
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1. Technical background
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* What is alt?
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Contrary to popular belief, "alt" is not named because it is for
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"alternative" topics. Back during the dawn of the modern Usenet,
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it was decided that newsgroups should be created by following a
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clearly defined set of "Guidelines", involving formal discussions
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and a voting procedure. There was a significant number of people
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who felt that there should be a provision for a place where people
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could create groups without having to go through any discussion or
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votes. Thus alt was born. It is a hierarchy that is "alternative"
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to the "mainstream" (comp,misc,news, rec,soc,sci,talk) hierarchy.
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"ALT stands for 'Anarchists, Lunatics, and Terrorists'." -
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ziegast@uunet.uu.net (Eric Ziegast)
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* Votes? Did someone say vote?
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Let me repeat. There are no votes in alt. Period. If you want to
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gather an "opinion poll" for your own purposes to see how popular
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the group will be, great. Do not post votes to alt.config. Every
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few months someone says "hey I've got a great idea for a newsgroup
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alt.widget, what do you think?". Someone responds "I vote yes!",
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causing a chain-reaction of posts to alt.config, lasting for days
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or weeks. These serve no purpose but to annoy readers of
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alt.config, and to distribute dozens of messages across the globe
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that should have ended up in someone's mailbox instead. Please,
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use a Followup-To: poster in your header and gather votes by
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e-mail. Then post a summary after a week or two.
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* News Administrators:
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Alt newsgroups are not created everywhere all at once. Each site
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has a news administrator, who ultimately decides whether to carry
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a new newsgroup on that site. Nevertheless, for simplicity, many
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sites automatically honor all requests to create a new group and
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(by default) ignore all requests to remove groups. Newsadmins can
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be very busy people who don't need the hassle of hand-approving
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every group. Thus, alt newsgroups are not necessarily created in a
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way that is fair, or just, or logical. That's life.
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* Newsgroup Name Components:
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A newsgroup name, e.g. alt.foo.bar-bar.baz, is made up of a series
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of dot-separated components, in this case alt, foo, bar-bar, and
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baz. The articles in newsgroups are usually stored in your
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machine's directory hierarchy. Basically, every component of the
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newsgroup name corresponds to a directory or subdirectory of the
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same name, and that subdirectory typically takes up 512 or more
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bytes on the machine all by itself. Also, since accessing any
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group requires eventually reading the contents of the directory,
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if there are lots of subdirectories off of alt access for any
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single article in alt can theoretically suffer a performance hit.
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Also, some newsreaders are hierarchically organized. To read
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alt.folklore.computers, you select alt, then select folklore, then
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computers. If there are lots of needless top-level components
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(e.g. More than four levels deep), then this is more work for the
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person reading news.
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* What is a newsgroup name for?
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A newsgroup is a collection of articles with a common purpose. A
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name for a newsgroup serves several purposes.
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+ It tells those who want to read the group that this group is
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for them.
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+ It tells those who do not want to read the group that this
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group is not for them.
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+ It classifies similar groups together so that:
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o the group name can convey more meaning than just what
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can fit in 14 letters. (e.g. alt.music.monkees vs.
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alt.monkees)
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o similar groups can be placed logically nearer to each
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other in sorted or hierarchical listings.
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o It makes those who are interested in various aspects of
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a more general classification more able to find specific
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groups. (For example, those interested in philosophy can
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search for "philosophy" in the newsgroup name to find
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general groups as well as those about specific
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philosphies like alt.philosophy.zen)
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o The top-level hieararchy is not a jumbled mess of
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thousands of newsgroups, with often ambiguous names.
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* Newsgroup Longevity:
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There are some people who insist that once an alt newsgroup is
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created, it can never be destroyed, no matter what. These people
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make sure that whenever someone tries to remove a group, it gets
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re-created. Even if these people were not on the net, occasional
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mistakes (in such situations as people setting up new sites) can
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cause almost-dead newsgroups to get revived everywhere. Thus, alt
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groups are effectively immortal, at least for the foreseeable
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future; they can't be removed or even re-named. Alt groups never
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die, they just fade away.
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2. Common Reasons Proposed Groups are Rejected
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* "Harmful" newsgroup names:
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Newsgroup names which have components that are composed of the
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characters other than the letters 'a' through 'z', plus the
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characters '-' and '+' are considered non-standard and not
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encouraged. Some odd characters can tickle bugs in some software,
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or require news admins to make special modifications in order to
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carry the group. Newsgroup components must be non-empty. (like
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"alt..foo") One joke group, ".cabal", was created and lots of
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software mysteriously stopped working in bizarre fashion.
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* Component Too Long:
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Some systems cannot handle a newsgroup name component that is
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longer than 14 characters. Thus alt.fan.bgcrisis (length of
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"bgcrisis" = 8) instead of alt.fan.bubblegum-crisis (length of
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"bubblegum-crisis" = 16). This restriction is becoming less and
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less critical, as software like INN handles this better. C news
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unfortunately enforces this limit, and makes it hard to
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accommodate exceptions. The author has no immediate plans to
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change this limitation.
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* Useless Components:
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If you take away components at the end of the name, you should not
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be left with a directory name that is unlikely to have any other
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newsgroups in it. Thus alt.fan.bg-crisis instead of
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alt.fan.bubble.gum.crisis (other "alt.fan.bubble" newsgroups?). In
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other words, don't use a dot as a word separator, use a dash.
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* Joke/Revenge/Shock Group:
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Because of newsgroup longevity (see below), newsgroups which are
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started just to get people to laugh at the name, and/or to get
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revenge on some specific person, and/or to shock people, are
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discouraged. They tend to generate a flurry of articles
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(sometimes) for a maybe even a month or two, but quickly die.
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* ".word.word.word" Ending:
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The first group was "alt.swedish.chef.bork.bork.bork". Since then,
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dozens of lookalike groups have been created. This was kind of
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funny at first (5 years ago) but the joke is old.
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* Top-Level Mess:
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There are dozens of newsgroups named alt.something, where
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something is a very specialized subject. Wouldn't it be nice if
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there were some classification scheme for them? Well, there is;
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you can name your group alt.food.something, or
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alt.sport.something, or whatever.
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* alt.acronym groups:
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Related to "Top-Level Mess" is the attempt to name the newsgroup
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based on some acronym. (alt.acm, alt.aclu) This is extremely
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unwise. First off, an acronym is not a good identifier of what a
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newsgroup is about. Groups like these tend to have a significant
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amount of traffic devoted to answering "hey, I just found this
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group alt.abd, what's this group about?" Weekly FAQ postings don't
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help. Remember alt is a worldwide hierarchy. Just because an
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acronym is popular in the US, doesn't make it recognizable to most
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people in the rest of the world. Second, acronyms are not unique.
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You'd be surprised how many trade acronyms there are, especially
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in the chemical and medical professions. One person's organization
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is another person's chemical or disease. Third, alt.acronym groups
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are hard to find when you're just browsing around. If they're
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interested in chemistry, people will search for 'chem' in the
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newsgroup name, not 'acs'. (American Chemical Society) See below
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for suggestions.
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* Big Seven Move Threat:
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Because of newsgroup longevity, many newsadmins will actually
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oppose creation of a group if you suggest you may want to move
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it to the "big seven" hierarchy (rec, soc, talk etc.) sometime in
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the future. Try to create it there first. On the other hand, some
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newsadmins will then suggest you try out an alt group before
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trying to create a "big seven" group.
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* Extremely Limited Interest:
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Yes, alt groups can be created for subjects that the "big seven"
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hierarchy wouldn't touch, but if the discussion you propose is
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extremely faddish, or silly, or of extremely limited or regional
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interest, some newsadmins may oppose it.
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More on "local" or "regional" groups in alt. Usually they are a
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bad idea. Remember that your articles will be traveling across the
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globe, on the disks of hundreds of thousands of machines. People
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in Saudi Arabia generally don't care much about great places to
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eat in Houston, Texas, USA.
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* Not Proposed in alt.config:
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Some newsadmins will not create any groups that haven't been
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discussed in alt.config (and after waiting several days for the
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responses). Posting your idea for a new group to alt.config is a
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very good idea anyway. Someone may have already created the group
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you proposed, or something similar. They may also point you to a
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mailing list that you might not have known about. They also will
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probably tell you if your group is poorly named.
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Eric Ziegast has this to say about alt.config:
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"You don't have to take their advice, but then again, who wants to
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start a fight? At least when people discuss a group first in
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alt.config, news admins throughout the world can decide whether or
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not to accept/feed your group if/when it's created. If people like
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your group suggestion, you will be considered a net.hero, and your
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group will likely exist until the end of time (which is currently
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January 2038 for Unix)."
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* "If Other Silly Newsgroup Deserves To Exist, Then So Does Mine"
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Since anyone can create a newsgroup in alt without fanfare,
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frequently anyone does. It's not a question of whether either
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newsgroup "deserves" existence. Think carefully about this point:
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you're willfully likening your proposal to all the silly and
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ridiculous newsgroups that already exist in the alt hierarchy. If
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you really want people to take you seriously, don't you think you
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can find a better argument?
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* "But No One's Forced To Accept It" Considered Irrelevant:
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Sure, no newsadmin has to accept your group if they don't want to;
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but the newsadmins are going to curse you for the hassle of having
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to decide on it -- when it gets created and every time it gets
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re-created. Also consider the consequence on the readers of the
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newsgroup. If their articles are only getting to a small minority
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of sites, is it even worth it?
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* "But All These People Agree" Considered Irrelevant:
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You might get 20 people who haven't read this FAQ to agree that
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your newsgroup is a good idea. This isn't likely to convince
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anyone either, if any of the reasons above apply.
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3. Some Positive Suggestions
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* Propose your group in alt.config. Be sure to include the proposed
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newsgroup name or topic for the group in the Subject line. Listen
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to constructive criticisms. Wait at week or so before acting on
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it. News propagation is not instantaneous, it sometimes takes as
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long as a week just for an article to be sent out and a followup
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to be sent back. Beware, the "discussions" in alt.config can seem
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very petty, vindictive, and altogether unpleasant at times.
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Alt.config is frequented by news admins, news.wannabes, net.gods,
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and net.idiots. Sometimes it's a wonder that anything useful comes
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out of it, but the alternative is total anarchy and mob ethics.
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Look past the ad hominem attacks, the finger pointing, the name
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calling, and political posturing. There are actually a few people
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in alt.config with good ideas on creating groups.
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* Look for an appropriate place in existing alt hierarchies.
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alt.binaries, .books, .comp, .culture, .fan, .games, .lang,
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.music, .politics, .religion, .sex, .society, and .tv are all
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fairly well accepted. Keep top-level hierarchies as broad as
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possible.
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* Put groups about sports under alt.sport. Put groups about
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individual sports teams under alt.sports (plural).
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* Spell the newsgroup name correctly. (or at least choose the most
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popular spelling :-) )
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* And please, try using existing Big Seven newsgroups, alt
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newsgroups, or mailing lists before insisting on creating another
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alt group. For example, don't create alt.drink.recipes when
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there's a perfectly good group already, rec.food.drink, with wider
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(and probably more well-informed) readership.
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* If you are trying to create a sub-topic of a high-traffic Big
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up, try to attempt to get the Big Seven group split first
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before attempting an alt group. For example, if you're tired of
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wading through rec.sport.golf for college golfing, don't try to
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create alt.sport.golf.college, try to create
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rec.sport.golf.college first. If the group is high-traffic, most
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likely readers will welcome a legitimate split.
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* If you want to create a group about something that has an acronym,
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try one of the following instead: don't use the acronym, but
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rather a generalized name of what the acronym is about
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(alt.alt.society.civil-liberty instead of alt.aclu; spell out the
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acronym ; or put the acronym inside of a sub-hierarchy that
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clearly identifies what the group is about. (alt.autos.bmw instead
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of alt.bmw)
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* If your group is related to current events, then create the group
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under alt.current-events.*. Note that alt.current-events.* is for
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short-lived current events, not extended discussions about some
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ongoing topic that just happens to be in the news today. Remember
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that there's already an existing group for current events:
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misc.headlines.
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* If your group contains binaries or other large files, create it
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under alt.binaries.*. Newsadmins will thank you for it, as they
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typically expire these groups more quickly to compensate for their
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large size.
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* Once you decide that it's time to create your newsgroup, contact
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your local news administrator. If you are a news administrator,
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the consult your news software documentation on how to issue a
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"newgroup" control message. The format of Usenet messages is
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defined in RFC 1036, which you may want to refer to. Alternatively
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you can modify someone else's control message if you forget all
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the syntax. Just look in the "control" newsgroup. It would be too
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hard to give a cookbook recipie for sending out a newgroup
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message, given the dozens of operating systems and news software
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programs out there. Contact a knowledgeable person at your own
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site - not me.
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One thing that is nice is to include a "For your newsgroups file:"
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line in the body of the message, to automatically have news
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software enter a description for the newsgroup. Many newsreaders
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use this description. The format is:
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For your newsgroups file:
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alt.group.name.here A one-line description
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Make sure that those two lines above are each on the beginning of a
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line, and that the first line appears exactly as you see here.
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* Also, many sites do NOT automatically honor "newgroup" messages;
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the news software at these sites will send mail to the news
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administrator, who will who will evaluate your request and decide
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whether or not to create the group. It may take a couple of days
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for the control message to propagate and be acted upon, so don't
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expect instant availability of the new group, particularly if you
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post the control message on a Friday night.
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Epilogue by Mark Weber:
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Here ends the lesson.
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This may sound like a lot of rigamarole, and it is. The purpose is
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to discourage creation of alt groups that might be better off as
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mainstream groups, or that might be better off left uncreated.
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Don't take this all too seriously, though. The "alt" net is the last
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remaining refuge away from the control freaks, namespace purists and
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net.cops (like myself) that maintain and enforce the mainstream
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newsgroup guidelines.
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There is still some room for spontaneity out here on the "alt"
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frontier. Successful groups have been created without following
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these suggestions. Almost any non-forged, serious newgroup message
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will at least be considered by most news admins. Some groups have
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been created just on a whim. The concept behind the group better be
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good (or a least entertaining), though!
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Credits:
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Based on previous work by:
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* jamie@cs.sfu.ca (Jamie Andrews)
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||
|
"Common Reasons Why People Oppose Proposed Alt Newsgroups"
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||
|
* ccs@aber.ac.uk (Christopher Samuel)
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||
|
"Creating a new "alt" group -- guidelines" originally by
|
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|
markw@gvlf8.gvl.unisys.com (Mark H. Weber)
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* ziegast@uunet.uu.net (Eric Ziegast)
|
||
|
"Welcome to ALT"
|
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With submissions from:
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* twpierce@unix.amherst.edu (Tim Pierce)
|