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- Newsgroups: rec.arts.comics.info,rec.answers,news.answers
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!leafusa!tyg
- From: tyg@hq.ileaf.com (Tom Galloway)
- Subject: Welcome to rec.arts.comics: Netiquette
- Message-ID: <comics-faq-4-766189091@hq.ileaf.com>
- Followup-To: rec.arts.comics.misc
- Originator: tyg@valhalla
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- Reply-To: tyg@hq.ileaf.com (Tom Galloway)
- Organization: Black Ink Irregulars
- References: <comics-faq-1-766189091@hq.ileaf.com>
- Date: Tue, 12 Apr 1994 22:22:21 GMT
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Expires: Fri, 13 May 1994 04:00:00 GMT
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- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu rec.arts.comics.info:851 rec.answers:4866 news.answers:17986
-
- Posted-By: auto-faq 2.4
- Archive-name: comics/faq/part4
-
- WELCOME TO REC.ARTS.COMICS (part 4 of 7: netiquette)
- written by lots of different people
- edited by Paul A. Estin 1990-1993
- Tom Galloway 1993-present
-
- [last update: 4/10/93]
-
- 4. guidelines for posting articles
-
- First, if you haven't already done so, read the articles in
- news.announce.newusers, especially "A Primer on How to Work with the USENET
- Community". In fact, go read it even if you've read it before; the article
- contains many helpful suggestions.
-
- After you've done that, read these r.a.c-specific comments:
-
- The most common r.a.c. netiquette mistakes made by newbies are:
-
- 1) Posting X-Men related articles in r.a.c.misc.
- 2) Quoting an entire article being responded to.
- a) And only adding what amounts to "I dis/agree" at the end
- b) Quoting less than the entire article, but not by much.
- c) Quoting a .sig and without commenting on it.
-
- Or, as Dave van Domelen put it in an LNH story modelled after Billy Batson's
- first encounter with Shazam...
- "As he followed the tunnel, the walls became more cavernlike and less
- public-workslike. Bas relief scupltures lined the walls..."The Seven Deadly
- Breaches of Netiquette." Flaming. Cascades. Gratuitous Crossposting. Not
- Trimming Included Articles. Me Too. Trolling. And the most hideous of all the
- sculptures...MAKE.MONEY.FAST."
-
- * Think about your audience.
-
- Make sure you post to the proper newsgroup, as explained in Part 1, on the
- r.a.c hierarchy and related newsgroups.
-
- * Have something to say, and support your arguments
-
- Post because you want to say something about comics, or ask a question
- about comics. Don't post to satisfy your ego. Respect other posters'
- opinions, though you may disagree with them. When arguing a point,
- rational argument with examples is preferable to sheer volume, or, worse,
- to personal attack. Say something substantive, that others would like to
- read and perhaps reply to.
-
- A special case of the above: If people aren't posting about a comic or
- character you're interested in, your best bet to start conversation about
- it is to post something relatively substantial about the topic. If you
- just post "I like Suicide Squid. Does anyone else?" it's doubtful you'll
- get much response. Posting "I like Suicide Squid because (reasons)" or
- "Does anyone know why this happened in Suicide Squid #37?" or even "Top Ten
- Reasons Suicide Squid Should Be Chopped Up Into Calimari (reasons)" will be
- much more likely to get discussion going. If you just post a complaint
- that Suicide Squid isn't being posted about, you'll basically get back that
- if you want Squiddy discussed, you should start a discussion.
-
- * Never forget that the person on the other side is human.
-
- This is a generally a friendly, tolerant newsgroup, and we like to keep it
- that way. One of the things which can destroy the pleasant atmosphere
- around here are "flames": inflammatory, insulting posts. People send
- articles saying things that they would never say to one another in person,
- perhaps because of the anonymity that electronic newsgroups provide.
- Please refrain from doing this. There *are* people on the other end of
- your message, and they're likely to take offense at your taking offense.
- The result is called a "flame war", and it wastes the time of everybody on
- the newsgroup. When you respond to an article, even one with which you
- vehemently disagree, try to respond to the *article*, not the poster; give
- reasoned rebuttal, not personal invective. Also, try not to dash off a
- reply in anger; you may regret it later. Instead, wait until after you've
- had some sleep and calmed down, before you reply. Finally, note that the
- best way to avoid a flame war with someone who is *obviously* looking for
- "attention" is to *ignore* that person.
-
- * Special note on "taste wars"...
-
- Of late [writing in late 1992], there's been an increasing amount of people
- bashing one another's tastes, using such invectives as "DC fans suck", "I
- hate you Marvel Zombies", "Marvel haters are a bunch of pretentious jerks",
- and so forth. The newsgroup r.a.c.xbooks was incorporated, for example, in
- hopes of splitting off those who read and rave about Marvel's X-titles from
- those who don't want to hear any more about them. Similarly, there seems
- to be an eternal war between the Image likers and haters.
-
- Consider this a special case of the above two categories. Have something
- to say, support your arguments, and argue against another post's substance
- or lack thereof, not to your assumed perception of its author. It *is*
- perfectly acceptable to post something like "People who read nothing but
- Marvel comics should try to look at some other comics; if you enjoyed <X>
- you might like <Y> from company <Z>. Here's why..." or "I'm tired of
- people bashing those of us who read Marvel; I happen to *like* reading
- books <X> and <A>. Here's why..." Either of these sorts of posts is a
- *lot* more likely to convince people of the Rightness of Your Opinions than
- is loud spleen-venting.
-
- Furthermore, as a general rule, either liking or disliking an *entire
- company's output* is a position of questionable merit. Many have gotten to
- the point where they tend to follow favorite writers and artists, instead of
- characters or companies. While there can be noticible trends in companies'
- output, if a company does more than a handful of titles there's a good
- chance there's some title(s) you'll think are "better" or "worse" than what
- you might expect from that company on average.
-
- At the same time, though, people here *can* get awfully pretentious. The
- best thing to do, again, no matter which side you're on, is to back up your
- posts with *substance*, and to reply to specifics, because much of the
- arguing is due to misunderstanding another's position.
-
- * Be careful with humor and sarcasm.
-
- Subtle humor tends to be missed in text-only form. There is a standard net
- method for indicating sarcasm: the "smiley", a group of symbols which look
- like a smiley-face on its side, like this :-)
-
- (A post with a non-generic reference to Suicide Squid is also fairly likely
- to be less than serious...)
-
- * Use mail, don't post a follow-up
-
- Many types of replies are best given by private electronic mail, not posted
- to the entire newsgroup audience. This seems obvious, but many people
- ignore this. For example, if someone posts a poll or a trivia contest, you
- should reply to them by electronic mail. Don't post!
-
- As a special case of this, posts which ask for people to post their top N
- titles/storylines/characters/etc. should be discouraged. Unless these lists
- have reasonably detailed explanations of why the poster has these
- particular entries, they get old fast. Posting that you're running an email
- poll on the top N whatevers and will post results is much better.
-
- * Don't overdo signatures
-
- You can include a signature on the end of your posts. (In "rn", if you
- create a ".signature" file, it will be added automatically.) But keep it
- short. Nothing is more boring than wading through the same long signature
- repeated on multiple articles. A maximum of four lines is suggested (and,
- on some systems, four is the maximum possible). You may see some frequent
- posters use longer .sigs. In general, these are people who include
- particularly interesting quotes (or original writing) in their .sigs and
- change it on a weekly or even per message frequency. Ascii art and
- lettering, borders, etc. is old hat to most people, and multiple quotes in
- a single .sig are definitely frowned on.
-
- * Read all follow-ups and don't repeat what has already been said
-
- This is especially important for answering questions that lots of people
- know the answers to, such as "What's the name of that bald guy who founded
- the X-Men?" or "When did Elrod last appear in Cerebus?" If you want to
- respond to an article or query, mark it (use the "M" key in "rn"), make
- sure no one has already said what you want to, and *then* go back and
- reply. Or, just be safe and answer by e-mail instead of posting.
-
- * Don't repost just because there were no follow-ups
-
- Don't assume that, simply because there weren't any follow-ups to your
- post, that it didn't go out. *Most* messages do not generate any
- follow-ups. If you go and post the message again, simply because it didn't
- cause discussion the first time, you will simply annoy others and make
- yourself look foolish. If you're really concerned about whether your posts
- are making it out, you might email a poster at a site other than yours and
- ask if they'd check if they've received your posts.
-
- * When following up an article, quote only the appropriate amount of text.
-
- Many posting programs make it easy to include text from the article you're
- responding to. Take care to edit this text down to the minimum needed to
- understand your new contribution to the discussion. Many readers skip past
- articles with a lot of included text, particularly at the beginning of an
- article. A rule of thumb is that if you include more than 10 lines of quoted
- text at a time, you're almost certainly doing something wrong. More than 5
- and you probably are. Including more than 20 quoted lines at the start of
- your post will insure that a fair number of people will *not* read it.
- Habitually including too many quoted lines gets you put in kill files.
-
- In particular, unless you are actually commenting on it in your post, there
- is no reason why you should ever include the .sig from an article you're
- responding to. The person's id is given at the start of the included text,
- and that's sufficient.
-
- * Double-check follow-up newsgroups and distributions
-
- "Cross-posting" is the practice of posting the same article to multiple
- newsgroups. If you're posting a review about the Akira movie, for example,
- then it would be relevant to the newsgroups rec.arts.anime and
- rec.arts.movies.reviews. Depending what you have to say (perhaps you are
- comparing the film to the manga version), it might also be relevant to
- rec.arts.comics.misc or rec.arts.manga. But try to limit crossposts as
- much as possible, and when you feel you *must* cross-post, include a
- "Follow-up:" line to only one of the newsgroups (in the sample case,
- probably "Follow-up: rec.arts.anime").
-
- "Distribution" refers to how far a post will propagate. While the majority
- of r.a.c. readers and posters seem to be from the United States, there have
- been posts from Canada, Mexico, Europe, Africa, Asia, South America, and
- Australia/New Zealand, obviously meaning there are readers there as well.
- For general comics matters, the correct distribution will be "world" so as
- not to leave anyone out who isn't from your state/province, country, or
- continent. On the flip side, if you're posting about a local event, post to
- "local" distribution or whatever is appropriate (e.g., "nj" for New
- Jersey). Sometimes it's hard to tell what's appropriate; thus, if you're
- telling people about a convention in the Boston area, and some people from
- outside Massachusetts might be interested (likely true), then you may wish
- to post to a wider area, like "usa" or "na". But try to apologize in
- advance when you do. Also, distributions don't always work, so if you in
- Australia see a post for a small 1-day convention in Boston, don't flame
- or otherwise admonish the poster without first checking that the
- distribution line isn't in fact "ne" and the post has escaped its attempted
- limitation.
-
- * Cite appropriate references; don't use unnamed sources
-
- In r.a.c, this means that it's preferable to include your source when
- stating "news" or "rumors". For example, you might write, "I read in CBG
- that Alonzo Mori won't be writing Suicide Squid after issue #100." That's
- preferable to stating "I heard that..."
-
- Please note that claiming unnamed "inside sources" is an almost sure way of
- casting doubt on your credibility. People are only able to get away with
- this to any degree once they've built up a reputation of being reliable,
- have shown they do indeed know people in the industry, and when it's clear
- there's a good reason for the anonymity. Keep in mind that there are
- several people here who really do either know people in the industry or are
- actually professionals and have established a reputation for reliability.
- All doing this sort of thing will do is hurt your net.reputation for a long
- time, because you will get called on it.
-
- * Mark Answers or Spoilers
-
- Ever had someone tell you events in a movie that you wanted to see,
- spoiling the surprise? It's the same with comics. If something you say
- might "give away" information about a new comic, state "WARNING: SPOILERS"
- at the beginning and/or header of your article. Also, insert a "<ctrl>L"
- so that the article doesn't scroll. In the "emacs" editor, this is done by
- typing <ctrl>Q followed by <ctrl>L. In the "vi" editor, type <ctrl>V and
- then <ctrl>L. Note that the <ctrl>L must be the first character on a line
- for this to work. If you include quoted text which includes a <ctrl>L,
- you'll have to remove the quote indicator character(s) or space in front of
- it for it to work.
-
- * suggestions for reviews
-
- There are several people who post reviews of comics (usually on r.a.c.info)
- periodically. Feel free to post your own reviews. Jim Drew has helpfully
- provided the following suggested guidelines:
-
- Jim's Rules of Review (like Robert's Rules of Order, and followed as often
- B-)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- 1. Don't review it if there is nothing to say about it.
- 2. Don't review *everything.*
- 3. Have a broad spectrum of reviews -- include something no one else will.
- 3.a. Don't be *too* esoteric -- include something from Marvel or DC, too.
- 4. Develop a style for your reviews that is uniquely your own.
- 5. Discuss the plot/themes/art/etc. "I liked it" is insufficient.
-
- People can e-mail Jim Drew directly for the expanded discussion.
- jrd@frame.com
-
- [end of Part 4]
- "There are no net.gods, just some people with bigger mouths than others."
- --Dan'l DanehyOakes, net.roach
- tyg tyg@hq.ileaf.com
-