138 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
138 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
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One Sysops Opinion
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I have run an RBBS since Nov. 1,1983. I held off security for 8
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months before being forced to go to a tight validation and registration
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system for users. Since the system is run as a public service at my
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company, I have had to defend the system to management for two years as
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a result of the jerks that abuse it. I don't mind the downloaders who
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use the system for nothing else. Many people have nothing to upload,
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not being able to afford to call long distance to many systems and many
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don't feel knowledgeable or secure enough yet to engage in talks with
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more experienced people. My users cover a wide range of experience
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levels from professionals to young kids with new machines from
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Christmas. Some make even me (10 yrs professional experience with
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micros) feel stupid, while some make me feel old. The only ones I mind
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are the destructors, who feel my system is a plaything for their
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experiments. Yet with time, patience, and some long phone
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conversations, even some of them have turned into responsible hackers.
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Those few kids alone, who have become some of my best users, have made
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all the problems worthwhile, since they are the ones who are interested
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and eager enough to become the SYSOPS of next week or next year. You
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will never get rid of all of the jerks. So concentrate on the
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successful users, let's not give up in disgust because of a few whose
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actions seem all out of proportion to their numbers.
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I think many of the Sysops around should have taken more time
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before they set up their BBS's to decide exactly why they were setting
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them up. Let's be honest. There are a few Sysops out there who think
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of themselves as liÿttle tin gods who love to play benevolent dictator.
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These are usually easily recognizable by the profound and pompous
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pronouncements they love to make in their welcome screens or bulletins.
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I think these people run their boards to give them an audience for
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their pomposity which they can't find elsewhere.
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Then there are the Sysops who are shocked and bewildered that
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someone would actually try to damage their systems. They react with
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beligerant threats, warnings, and espousals of dire punishments that
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should be meted out to offenders. These are the people who ignore
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vandalism on subways, crime in the street, problems in the schools etc.
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because it doesn't touch them personally. But when it does, whew, watch
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out for the righteous wrath of the offended.
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COME ON FRIENDS. Knock it off. You knew, or should have known
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what you were doing when you set up your BBS. You were throwing your
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house open to the public when you gave out the number. You were
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extending an open invitation to the public to come in and play. Why are
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you shocked that there are idiots loose in the world? Were you
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idealistic enough to think that everyone had your high ethical
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standards, or were you just naive? Recognize that some people have no
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morals and take the appropriate precautions. You lock your house when
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you leave it unattended don't you, yet do you abandon your house and
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live in the bushes because someone broke into it? Do you ban all
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visitors because one person abused your hospitality?
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As for this idea that people should treat you and your system
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nicely because you out of the goodness of your heart are allowing them
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to use your equipment, again, COME ON. Face reality. The jerks don't
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care. When I log onto your system, I don't know you from Adam. You are
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just a name on the welcome screen, no different from any other Sysop.
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How affectionate or caring do you feel about the faceless nameless
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operator you talk to on the phone? Most of your users know you only as
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a disembodied presence who leave notes and does other mysterious things
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somewhere on the other end of a modem line. If you are the kind of
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person who needs strokes to feel good, if you get your feelings hurt
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easily, if you get depressed when you feel someone doesn't like youÿ,
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then you shouldn't be running a board. Leave it to those of us who are
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a bit more thick skinned. If you don't want your hospitality abused,
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your system crashed, and your passwords violated, then either stay out
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of the game or set up a private board for your friends only, no
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strangers allowed.
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Now that I have sounded off about the ISP (I'm So Pitiful) club,
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let me take note of a few of the positives, and YES there are some.
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First off, there is the often spoken of feeling of providing a much
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needed service to a very special community of very special people,
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computer hackers (using the term in its old sense). You are in touch
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with and have your finger on the pulse of the next wave of human
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progress. As a Sysop, you are on the crest of that wave, you're one of
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the people making it happen.
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Your system is the catalyst that is providing the means for
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information to spread and ferment into new ideas. The programs and
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patches and bits and pieces of information your board contains are the
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very fuel of this movement. The Freeware and Shareware and such, that
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is only possible through your boards, is the force that is driving the
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software industry where WE want it to go. They must provide what WE
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want ultimately or WE will provide it for ourselves and leave them to
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die like dinosaurs.
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You and your board are the places where the young people get
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their true exposure to computers in the real world. Sure their schools
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teach them how to turn machines on and off, but it is your board and
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the people and software on it that show them the real wonders of
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computers. All of those kids who want to crash your board or snuff your
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files are the troublemakers, the smart-ass kids who think they can do
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anything. Those are the smart little punks who have the tenacity to try
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those things that they know they shouldn't, to do the impossible things
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that you know can't be done. If your only concern is to have a nice
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neat well mannered board where everyone does the expected thing in just
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the right way, then lock them out and you will have a nice neat,
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well-mannered and boring board that neatly follows all the proper
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guidelines and customs. Or, alternately, you could try talking with the
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little monsters. Most of the ones I have spent time working with on the
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phone or in person, have turned out to be pretty smart little devils
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once I got past the hard shell. Sure it's hard and frustrating, and
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time-consuming. Try getting them on your side for a change instead of
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against you. Form a users group for kids under 16. Offer a standing
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reward of $5 for a new way to crack your system. Then you are more
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likely to find a Trojan Horse on your system because the kid calls up
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and tells you that he uploaded it and not because you found it the hard
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way.
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Get them to let you onto their local pirate boards. You don't
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have to participate or pirate software or engage in unlawful
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activities, you don't even have to condone their activities, but keep
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in mind that if you try to stop it, you will never know when it starts
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up again. Find out what there concerns are. Find out what they are
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doing and how they are doing it. You might be shocked to discover that
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they aren't as bad as you imagine. You might even remember when you
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were young and think about the things that you did. Instead, find the
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ones who lead this kind of thing. They are the sharpest of the bunch.
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They are the leaders and shakers of that world. Those are the ones you
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have to win over to your side. You can't lecture and throw your weight
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around, it doesn't work. Challenge them, lead them. Show them that
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there are better ways. Help them set up a better board, help them
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conquer their computer problems. The first time I advertised on my
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board about a kid's users group,(no adults allowed, strictly for them),
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the first ones to flock to it were the "troublemakers". They were the
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ones who ended up leading it and once they had the responsibility and
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had to deal with the same problems you as a Sysop deal with, suddenly
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they began to see where I was coming from.
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Those kids and troublemakers are the Sysops of tomorrow. They are
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the ones who will drive the computer revolution to where it must go.
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You can't beat 'em and you sure don't want to join 'em, but you can
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sure be the one who helps guide them to where they need to go.
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Think about it, the next time you have to delete an obscene
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message the likes of which YOU of course never scrawled on a wall when
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you were a kid. And when you get those ten new disks of software from
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your old buddy in Idaho or California, feel smug that You got them and
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not the kid down the street. (The same one you blasted because he never
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uploads anything.) To a lot of people out there, YOU are the source of
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software for them and for a long while, the stuff they write will not
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be worth uploading until they become a lot sharper programmer. They are
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the students and are not yet ready to teach. Of course you could ignore
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the students and make it all neat and tidy |