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-
- Archive-name: net-anonymity/part3
- Last-modified: 1994/5/9
- Version: 1.0
-
- ANONYMITY on the INTERNET
- =========================
-
- Compiled by L. Detweiler <ld231782@longs.lance.colostate.edu>.
-
-
- <4.1> What are the responsibilities of anonymous server operators?
- <4.2> What kind of rules should the server operator maintain?
- <4.3> Should the anonymous server operator maintain high `visibility'?
- <4.4> Should the anonymous server operator ever reveal identities?
- <4.5> What should system operators do with anonymous postings?
-
- <5.1> How does anonymity relate to group moderation?
- <5.2> Should group votes be held on allowing anonymity?
- <5.3> Should anonymous posting to all groups be allowed?
- <5.4> Does anonymity have a place in `serious' or `scientific' areas?
- <5.5> What are some testimonials for anonymity?
- <5.6> What are some testimonials against anonymity?
-
-
- _____
- <4.1> What are the responsibilities of anonymous server operators?
-
- Jurgen Botz <jbotz@mtholyoke.edu>:
-
- > I think that what ... these points show clearly is that an
- > anonymous posting service has a great deal of responsibility,
- > both towards its clients and towards the Net as a whole. Such a
- > service should (IMHO) have a set of well-defined rules and a
- > contract that its clients should sign, under the terms of which
- > they are assured anonymity.
-
- Johan Helsingius <julf@penet.fi>:
-
- > I have tried to stay out of this discussion, and see where the
- > discussion leads. But now I rally feel like I have to speak up.
- > ... I have repeatedly made clear ... that I *do* block users if
- > they continue their abuse after having been warned. In many cases
- > the users have taken heed of the warning and stopped, and in some
- > cases even apologized in public. And when the warning has not had
- > the desired effect, I have blocked a number of users.
-
- Karl Krueger <kkrueg@ukelele.GCR.COM>:
-
- > Is M. Julf acting in an irresponsible manner by not taking action
- > against objectionable uses of his server? Of course not! His
- > server serves as a common carrier, a service that impassively and
- > disinterestedly passes information, like a smoothly-running
- > machine. M. Julf is, in fact, avoiding the political flamefront
- > by not intruding into his users' business! If he did, he would
- > be a censor!
-
- David A. Clunie <dclunie@pax.tpa.com.au>:
-
- > Presumably this was why the anonymous server I ran that allowed
- > encryption to and from posting and receiving sites with total
- > anonymity was so popular - it meant that even an unscrupulous
- > postmaster who read other people's mail could not see posts and
- > replies even in the mail queue and spool areas ... they were
- > encrypted right up to the user's workstation. If the decryption
- > was run offline (ie. not on the mail server but on the user's
- > desktop) then even keystroke capturing would not allow the evil
- > administrator to intercept the message !
-
- Afzal Ballim <afzal@divsun.unige.ch>:
-
- > Julf, when I came into this fray you were being painted as someone
- > who wanted to give totally unrestrictive anonymous posting
- > abilities to people, without there being any notion of
- > responsibilty attached to it. More recently, some people have
- > said that this is not the case, and that you will deal with
- > irresponsible posting in the same way as any other sysadmin would
- > do. I haven't seen a posting from you in a long time on this
- > matter. Can you please clear up what is your policy?
-
- Richard M. Hartman <hartman@ulogic.UUCP>:
-
- > There have also been a lot of postings claiming that, despite
- > complaints, Johan has taken no action against posters (in
- > contradiction with the implied promise in the signature appended
- > to each message).
-
- Robert MacDowell <bobmacd@netcom.com>:
-
- > Another operator of an ACS equipped his with a "fire
- > extinguisher" which he did use once or twice to eliminate public
- > posting from certain assholes. While I firmly believe that Julf
- > should stand by his guns and continue to support anonymous
- > posting to anywhere, it is *also* appropriate for him to block
- > posting from anyone who's proven himself to be dangerous.
-
- Jay Maynard <jmaynard@nyx.cs.du.edu>:
-
- > The site admin is postmaster@anon.penet.fi ... who appears to be
- > almost completely unwilling to rein in his users, and refuses to
- > participate in discussions about his service. By the time he
- > imposes his minimum sanction on a particular user, the damage has
- > been done, and there is no reason someone shouldn't use the
- > anonymous service to break the law: he can do so, secure in the
- > knowledge that he will never be held accountable for the crime.
-
- Dr. Cat <From: cat@wixer.cactus.org>:
-
- > I don't know if Julf's level of "reasonableness" is really a
- > relevant issue. After all, isn't it just as possible a system
- > administrator at a "normal" site that doesn't host any anon
- > server could be totally unreasonable about helping out with valid
- > requests you might make of him/her? The issue of whether people
- > are "reasonably helpful" in resolving problems or not, and what
- > should be done about them if they aren't, is a seperate issue
- > from whether anon servers should exist or not.
-
- Ze Julf <julf@penet.fi>:
-
- > I have noticed with an increasing concern the fact that people use
- > the anonymous service at anon.penet.fi to post copyrighted
- > pictures in a.b.p.e. This exposes both the server and the net as
- > a whole to lawsuits, and is definitely inappropriate use of the
- > service. I hereby warn that anybody posting copyrighted material
- > will be blocked from the server.
- >
- > There has also been some concern about the volume of binary
- > postings using the server. I really hope that users will have the
- > common sense not to flood the group (and the server) with too
- > much material at one go, but I might have to implement some kind
- > of limiting mechanism into the server if things don't improve.
-
- Ze Julf <julf@penet.fi>:
-
- > The anonymous service at anon.penet.fi has been closed down.
- >
- > ... I really want to apologize both to all the users on the
- > network who have suffered from the abusive misuse of the server,
- > and to all the users who have come to rely on the service. Again,
- > I take full responsibility for what has happened.
-
- Ze Julf <julf@penet.fi>:
-
- > I would like to take advantage of the current break in the service
- > to implement the improvements and changes I had planned for
- > anon.penet.fi Mark II. Among changes I already have in the
- > pipeline is support for PGP and PEM encrypted messages, digital
- > signatures, and "public" and "private" anon ID's, as well as a
- > cleaner user interface.
- >
- > Meanwhile, I would like ask *you* for help. I have set up the
- > address "ideas@penet.fi" to receive input, suggestions for
- > improvements, comments etc., so please let me know what kind of
- > features you would like to see (both technical and
- > policy-related) in the new server by sending your input to that
- > address.
- >
- > I would also suggest that those groups that had started or had
- > been thinking about doing a vote on the desirability of anonymity
- > for that group continue with their plans and let me know the
- > results.
-
- _____
- <4.2> What kind of rules should the server operator maintain?
-
- Karl Kleinpaste <anonymus+0@charcoal.com>:
-
- > The following "commandments" were suggested during a discussion on
- > anonymous servers in news.admin.policy; credit, thanx, and
- > appreciation to Laura Lemay <lemay@netcom.com>
- >
- > 2. Thou shalt not bait.
- > 5. Thou shalt not cause undue distress to the members of any
- > newsgroup.
- > 7. Thou shalt not cause the anonymous server to come under fire.
- >
- > All of this seemingly-excessive formalism comes down to one really
- > very simple premise that your mother tried to teach you before
- > you got to kindergarten:
- >
- > Play nice.
- >
- > That's all. Play nice, act responsibly, don't flame needlessly
- > (or, at least, very often), think about what you're doing, and
- > don't lose touch with the fact that the Usenet is not Real
- > Life(tm).
-
- David Hayes <dave@jato.jpl.nasa.gov>:
-
- > What this says is that _you_ set the standards for
- > interpretation.
-
- Karl Kleinpaste <Karl_Kleinpaste@cs.cmu.edu>:
-
- > It's my server, running on my system, with my butt hanging out in
- > the breeze if anything goes wrong. Of _course_ I set the
- > standards for interpretation, you twit.
- >
- > ... it's a seat-of-the-pants analysis at every step, life's like
- > that. If you can't figure out a way to put the phrase "play
- > nice" into a workable context, you have demonstrated that you
- > have a serious need to re-take Remedial Social Graces 101.
- >
- > What it comes down to is, If you can't raise the topic in a
- > careful, thoughtful, and tactful way so as not to abusively peg
- > the flamage meter on first assault, then I don't think you have
- > much business using my server. And that's my call.
- >
- > I've done nothing more than lay down the ground rules, very fuzzy
- > and open-to-interpretation and why-dont-we-
- > work-this-out-together ground rules, on what should not go
- > through my server. Nothing more. The world will not end if you
- > screw up, induce a flame war, and I block you from the server for
- > a week or so as a result.
-
- Evan Leibovitch <evan@telly.on.ca>
-
- > It would be hypocritical of me to say that a well-working aliasing
- > system (not a true anonymous service) couldn't fulfill the
- > requirements for anonymity in terms of people wanting to stay in
- > the "closet" (and I don't just mean in matters of homosexuality).
- > Having set one up in for rec.arts.erotica, I know what's
- > involved, and I've seen the need.
- >
- > I have no problem (never did) with the aliasing service used for
- > alt.sex.bondage that predates Julf's service by quite a while.
- > It's specific to the group and allows (even encourages) verbal
- > aliases. It's admin was trusted as someone who could balance
- > privacy and responsibility.
- >
- > It was the no-holds-barred service I objected to, with no
- > publlcly-posted FAQ that I ever saw, probably because you
- > couldn't possibly post it in every group hit by penet's anon
- > posters.
- >
- > Given the choice of a badly-run aliasing system or none at all, I
- > would choose none.
-
- Karl Kleinpaste <Karl_Kleinpaste@cs.cmu.edu>:
-
- > The goal in making these rules/guidelines/recommendations is not,
- > by any means, to be insulting, or to play the part of a control
- > freak, or to be generally irritating. The goal is survival only,
- > survival of the server so that it may continue to provide its
- > intended services to the vast majority of honorable, decent,
- > adult users.
- >
- > There is by now quite a backlog of experience to show that
- > anonymous servers are difficult, dangerous beasts.
- >
- > Anonymous servers have a tendency to die. We should prevent this.
-
- Ed Hall <edhall@rand.org>:
-
- > So a reasonable set of rules, such as Karl has proposed for his
- > service, make a lot of sense. True, there is judgement
- > involved--as there is in any situation where people's needs are
- > balanced against each other. Karl could make a royal mess of
- > things by interpreting the merely disagreeable as actual
- > harassment. But just as long as the "penalty" is restriction and
- > not revelation, the anonymous poster can simply seek other means
- > with little harm done.
-
- Francisco X DeJesus <dejesus@avalon.nwc.navy.mil>:
-
- > I think that a server in which anonymity is guaranteed, PROVIDED
- > you abide by certain rules would be far from useless. Just state
- > what the rules are, plainly and clearly, and state what the
- > consequences of breaking them would be. Such a service is what
- > most people here would have liked, and I doubt it would get a
- > 'bad name' if the rules and limitations were reasonable.
- >
- > Now back to the regularly scheduled flame war...
-
- Doug Linder <PSION@HOLONET.NET>:
-
- > If the policies were fair and clearly defined, I don't think
- > anyone would have a problem with them - at least not the average
- > users. And the threat of exposure would keep the bratty
- > anarchist college kids from getting way out of line.
-
- Julf <an0@anon.penet.fi>:
-
- > I am a firm believer in everybody's right to express themselves
- > freely (why else would I put in lots of money and effort into
- > running this blasted server?), but posting purely abusive
- > messages intended to irritate people on purpose is not what the
- > service is intended for. Childish tricks like that was exactly
- > the reason the server got closed down, and will only lead to more
- > and more newsgroups banning anonymous postings alltogether.
- >
- > I therefore ask you to refrain from this kind of postings. If you
- > do continue with the abusive messages, I am forced to block your
- > access to the server. Please feel free to contact me if you want
- > to discuss the matter.
-
-
- _____
- <4.3> Should the anonymous server operator maintain high `visibility'?
-
-
- Richard M. Hartman <hartman@ulogic.UUCP>:
-
- > I guess one of the things I like LEAST about this guy is his
- > refusal to take part in the discussion that his service has
- > spawned. I have seen a total of two postings from him (if I
- > missed any, I apologize).
- >
- > Even more, the fact that he did not discuss the new service and
- > it's potential impact BEFORE he implemented it.
-
- Johan Helsingius <julf@penet.fi>:
-
- > I have answered a lot of personal mail related to server abuse,
- > and as a result of that, blocked a number of abusive users. I
- > have also withdrawn the service from several newsgroups where the
- > users have taken a vote on the issue. I have not made any
- > comments on news.admin.policy, partly because the
- > newly-implemented password feature (as a emergency measure
- > against a security hole) has kept me really busy answering user
- > queries the last two weeks, and partly because I feel it is not
- > for me to justify the service, but for the users. The problem
- > with news.admin.policy is that the readership is rather elective,
- > representing people whith a strong interest in centralised
- > control.
-
- Richard M. Hartman <hartman@ulogic.UUCP>:
-
- > This seems to be a rather bigoted attitude. I would consider that
- > this group is for anyone who wishes to discuss how the net should
- > be controlled. Saying that we only have an interest in
- > "centralized control" is a clear indication of bias. You are
- > perfectly welcome to join in the discussions here to promote your
- > views on control.
-
- Barry Salkin <bsalkin@nyx.cs.du.edu>:
-
- > I'm also grateful to Julf. His server was a boon to many people
- > who did NEED anonymity, as well as people to whom it was merely
- > convenient, as evidenced by its messages of support. ... I would
- > also like to express my admiration for the way he conducted
- > himself - rarely replying to public flames publicly, and always
- > being reasonable. ... He may have made mistakes, (this is still
- > debateable), but I feel the net.at.large could learn a great deal
- > from his noble attitude.
-
- Paul S. Sears <sears@tree.egr.uh.edu>:
-
- > I would like to be the first to publicly thank Julf for making a
- > public statement about his intentions. The shows that he does
- > care and is responsible (accusations that I stated he did not
- > demonstrate which I posted earlier). It is not necessarily
- > what his actions are, but the fact that he acknowledges that
- > there _might_ be a problem and is doing what he deems as
- > necessary and in the best interests of everyone involved.
- >
- > By this action alone, Julf has quelled all of my previous concerns
- > about anonymous posting sites...
-
- Tarl Neustaedter <tarl@coyoacan.sw.stratus.com>:
-
- > The server has come back in a FAR more restricted form, and Johan
- > seems to be far more pro-active about controlling abuse. Some of
- > it may be merely appearance, he seems to have taken to heart
- > comments about being _visibly_ in control.
-
- Richard E. Depew <red@uhura.neoucom.edu>:
-
- > Julf -- I also want to express my deep gratitude to *you*. You
- > have, by posting this warning, demonstrated that you are serious
- > about your promise to curb abusive users. I have full confidence
- > in your integrity and commitment to running anon.penet.fi in a
- > responsible manner.
- >
- > Don't worry, Julf, you are still on my Christmas card list ...
- > :-)
-
- Karl Kleinpaste <Karl_Kleinpaste@cs.cmu.edu>:
-
- > I soured on Julf himself because of his apparent refusal even to
- > discuss the matter in public, and because the very few times that
- > he had anything to say at all, it was always pretty much to say
- > (as I read it), "it runs like this, and it _will_not_ change."
-
- Ze Julf <julf@penet.fi>:
-
- > In retrospect I realize that I have been guilty to keeping a far
- > too low profile on the network, prefering to deal with the abuse
- > cases privately instead of making strong public statements.
- > Unfortunately I realized this only a couple of days before being
- > forced to shut down the service, but the results of a single
- > posting to alt.binaries.pictures.erotica.d gave very positive
- > results. I take full blaim for my failure to realize the
- > psychological effects of a strongly stated, publicly visible
- > display of policy with regards to the abuse cases. For this I
- > have to apologize to the whole net community.
-
-
- _____
- <4.4> Should the anonymous server operator ever reveal identities?
-
- Carl Kleinpaste (Karl_Kleinpaste@godiva.nectar.cs.cmu.edu):
-
- > ...were I to be in the position of offering such a service again,
- > my promises of protection of anonymity would be limited. Not on
- > the basis of personal opinion of what gets posted, but on the
- > basis of postings which disrupt the smooth operation of the
- > Usenet. The most obvious and direct recourse would be to `out'
- > the abusive individual. Less drastic possibilities exist -- the
- > software supports a "fire extinguisher" by which individuals can
- > be prevented from posting.
- >
- > I know full well that my attitude is such that certain folk will
- > consider themselves to be prevented from using it. That's fine.
- > That's their choice. No loss to either of us. They'll find
- > another anon server, or do without.
-
- Ze Julf <julf@penet.fi>:
-
- > A lot of people have contacted me to ask for help in setting up a
- > similar service, or to inform me of their plans to set up a
- > service. I really applaud and support these efforts, but I also
- > encourage the anon service operators to make their policies very
- > clear to their users. One example is that some potential anon
- > service operators feel the best way to deal with abusers is to
- > expose them on the net. Personally I feel that the idea of public
- > stocks belong to the middle ages, and that it provides a very
- > dangerous way to expose somebody by sending faked abusive
- > messages (and yes, it is trivially easy to fake the identity of
- > the sender of both e-mail and netnews articles even without an
- > anon server). There are also different policies regarding logging
- > messages, the physical security of the server etc.
-
- Sean Barrett <sean@gomez.Jpl.Nasa.Gov>
-
- > Way to go, Julf! Here is one user you can count on for complete
- > support!
-
- Brad Templeton <brad@clarinet.com>:
-
- > With that in mind, the operator has to realize that there can be
- > guidelines about abuse of the anon server. That's already true,
- > since I can't imagine somebody letting others use their anon
- > server for really illegal traffic, unless they agree with the
- > traffic and want to support it.
- >
- > One can easily enforce such policies by denying access, or far
- > worse, revealing the identities of abusers.
-
- Dave Kirsch <zoid@deep.rsoft.bc.ca>:
-
- > I think one of the successes of the anon.penet.fi server was
- > because Julf didn't reveal any users' identity. If he did, he
- > would have been flamed to death and his service given a 'bad
- > name.'
- >
- > For an anonymous posting service to be respected and in any way
- > successful, anonymity MUST be guaranteed. If it wasn't, then
- > the service is basically useless.
-
- <styri@balder.nta.no>:
-
- > My respect towards Julf is increasing, btw. He's bound to have got
- > his share of shouting, name calling, finger pointing and flak
- > these last months that keeping his mouth shut about the identity
- > of some of the abusers must have been hard at times.
-
- Brad Templeton <brad@clarinet.com>:
-
- > Rather, it seems to be the case that due to fairly large net
- > opposition, only anonymity services that have some sort of
- > restrictions will get to exist.
- >
- > Other solutions proposed, such as services that lay down rules and
- > threaten to reveal names if the rules are broken may well be
- > satisfactory.
-
- "somebody":
-
- > There is an interesting problem with control and moderation. The
- > only way to ensure it is to threaten to expose the identity of
- > violators. However, who determines where the line is crossed, and
- > if violating the privacy for all posts by that person is
- > justified by the content of a few? It would make an interesting
- > ethics debate at some point....
-
- _____
- <4.5> What should system operators do with anonymous postings?
-
- Ed McGuire <emcguire@intellection.com>:
-
- > I would like to know how to junk all articles posted by the
- > anonymous service currently being discussed. Ideally I would
- > actually tell my feed site not to feed me articles posted by the
- > anonymous service. Assuming the C News Performance Release, what
- > is a simple way to accomplish this? Or where should I look to
- > learn how to do it myself?
-
- David Clunie <dclunie@pax.tpa.com.au>:
-
- > That's a bit draconian isn't it ? Have your users unanimously
- > decided that they would like you to do this or have you decided
- > for them ?
-
- Ed McGuire <emcguire@intellection.com>:
-
- > Good question. Nobody has decided. I have no definite plan to do
- > this, just wanted the technical data.
-
- John Hascall <john@iastate.edu>:
-
- > Since when is Usenet a democracy? If someone wants to run an
- > anonymous service, that's their business. If you want to put
- > that host in your killfile, that's your business. If a newsadmin
- > wants to blanket-drop all postings from that site, that's between
- > them and the other people at that site. If everyone ignores a
- > service, the service effectively doesn't exist.
-
- Karl Kleinpaste <Karl_Kleinpaste@cs.cmu.edu>:
-
- > It's bloody fascinating that (all?) the proponents of unimpeded
- > universal anon posting access can't seem to find any middle
- > ground at all. Why is there such a perception of absolutism?
- > Where does this instant gratification syndrome come from, "I want
- > anon access and I want it NOW"? Who are the control freaks here?
-
- David Toland <det@sw.stratus.com>:
-
- > Why is this such a holy cause? Why the overwhelming urge to
- > police the net (a vain pursuit IMO)? Why silence a voice just
- > because the speaker is afraid to show himself, whether or not you
- > agree with his or her reasons for hiding?
-
- Richard E. Depew <red@redpoll.neoucom.edu>:
-
- > please listen to the consensus of the news administrators in this
- > group: any newsgroup should be consulted *before* letting your
- > server post messages to that group.
-
- Alexander EICHENER <C96@vm.urz.uni-heidelberg.de>:
-
- > There is no pompous "consensus of *the* news administrators"
- > here - maybe you would like to invent one. There is a sizeable
- > number of people who are concerned about the possible (and, to a
- > minor extent, about the actual abuse of the server as it is
- > configured now). These concerns are respectable; Johan is dealing
- > with them. ... There are some (few) who rage with foam before
- > their mouth and condemn the service altogether. And a number who
- > defend it, pointing out, like Kate Gregory, that even a group
- > like misc.kids. can benefit from pseudonymous postings.
-
- K. Kleinpaste <Karl_Kleinpaste@cs.cmu.edu>:
-
- > I think I'm feeling especially rude and impolite. If it's good
- > for Johan, it's good for me. After all, he didn't ask the
- > greater Usenet whether universal anon access was a good idea; he
- > just did it. ... Yes, I'm a seriously rude pain in the ass now,
- > and I think I'll arm the Usenet Death Penalty, slightly modified,
- > not for strategic whole-site attack, but tactical assault, just
- > "an[0-9]*@anon.penet.fi" destruction. Only outside alt.*, too,
- > let's say.
- >
- > To parrot this line...people have been doing things like the UDP
- > (that is, cancelling others' postings) for years, no one could
- > ever stop them, and it's only politeness and good sense that has
- > prevented them up to now.
- >
- > There are 2 newsadmins ready to arm the UDP. They've asked for my
- > code. I haven't sent it yet. Only one site would be necessary to
- > bring anon.penet.fi to a screeching halt. Anyone can implement
- > the UDP on their own, if they care to. Politeness and good sense
- > prevents them from doing so. I wonder how long before one form of
- > impoliteness brings on another form.
-
- Ze Julf <julf@penet.fi>:
-
- > It would be trivially easy to bring anon.penet.fi to a screeching
- > halt. In fact it has happened a couple of times already. But as
- > we are talking threats here, let me make one as well. A very
- > simple one. If somebody uses something like the UDP or
- > maliciously brings down anon.penet.fi by some other means, it
- > will stay down. But I will let the users know why. And name the
- > person who did it. OK? As somebody said on this thread: "You have
- > to take personal responsibility for your actions", right?
-
- Perry E. Metzger <pmetzger@snark.shearson.com>:
-
- > The desire of the news administrators of the world to save me from
- > possible grief is touching -- but misguided. I need and want no
- > censorship of my newsfeed.
-
- Ze Julf <julf@penet.fi>:
-
- > I am deeply concerned by the fact that the strongest opposition to
- > the service didn't come from users but from network
- > administrators. I don't think sysadmins have a god-given mandate
- > to dictate what's good for the users and what's not. A lot of
- > users have contacted me to thank me for the service, describing
- > situations where anonymity has been crucial, but I could never
- > have imagined in my wildest dreams. At the same time quite a few
- > network administrators have made comments like "I can't imagine
- > any valid use for anonymity on the net" and "The only use for
- > anonymity is to harrass and terrorize the net".
-
- Christopher Pilewski <cap@mb5000.anes.upmc.edu>:
-
- > The whole idea of closing down anon.penet.fi because a few people
- > were irresponsible is absurd. It is akin to ... closing down the
- > highway system because a few people speed.
- >
- > I should also mention that the internet has a small number of
- > wide-eyed, tiny-brained control-freaks running lose on it. (You
- > guys know who you are.) Arguments about freedom won't have any
- > meaning to them. They neither approve of nor understand freedom.
- > My argument is not even aimed at them. It is aimed at reasonable
- > people who happen to take the view opposed to mine.
-
- Karl Krueger <kkrueg@ukelele.GCR.COM>:
-
- > For the sake of the NET's posterity and that of future users,
- > allow freedom to reign. If Julf's service is a Bad Thing for the
- > NET, it will eventually die out of its own lack of productivity.
- > There is no need to try to lobotomize it.
-
- Richard M. Hartman <hartman@ulogic.UUCP>:
-
- > What admins have a responsibility to is the smooth operation of
- > the network. Actually an anon service COULD be good for the
- > users -- I was just trying to "dictate" what I thought was good
- > for the anon service (in my own way) <g>.
-
- Richard E. Depew <red@redpoll.neoucom.edu>:
-
- > I went into the lab to look for an anti-pathogen that would
- > inhibit the growth of the pathogen. I found one -- the Usenet
- > Death Penalty. This was clearly dangerous stuff, so I tried to
- > attenuate it -- to improve its therapeutic index.
- >
- > The UDP was designed to totally eradicate postings from a given
- > site from all of USENET. I didn't want to do that -- I only
- > wanted to protect the part I valued most highly -- the brain. So
- > I attenuated the UDP so it would only affect the "sci" hierarchy.
-
- Dan Veditz <daniel@borland.com>:
-
- > I can certainly see a group not liking anonymous posts, but let
- > the group decide to moderate them away, not you. It's not much
- > different from unwanted proseletyzers on the religious groups.
-
- Jonathan Eifrig <eifrig@beanworld.cs.jhu.edu>:
-
- > Do we _really_ want to start assigning liability to providers for
- > the posts that their users create? Sounds like a recipe for
- > disaster to me. If this were the state of the law, how many
- > undergraduates would have Usenet access then? I doubt many
- > universities would take the risk.
-
- Michael Friedman <mfriedma@us.oracle.com>:
-
- > Finally, in a total breach of what he claimed in his post, Julf
- > says that he will resume a general, unrestricted service as soon
- > as he gets his own connections to the appropriate networks.
-
- <grady@netcom.com>:
-
- > So... are you saying that Julf hasn't passed the
- > stupidity/conformity examination required for proper membership
- > among the elite Backboner Cabal?
-
- Richard E. Depew <red@uhura.neoucom.edu>:
-
- > My "net-probation" offer clearly says that if I feel the need to
- > change my mind on this, I won't do it suddenly. Instead, I'll
- > announce my intent to news.admin.policy a week in advance, so I
- > can take the comments and suggestions of other thoughtful news
- > admins into account before making a final decision.
- >
- > I will *shelve* ARMM for the forseeable future. I will let you
- > know if the irresistable urge to commit net-suicide should strike
- > me in the future.
- >
- > How could you have a problem with this?
- >
- > Heck, if this works out well (as measured by personal survival
- > criteria), I may make this a permanent commitment, but I want to
- > see whether it works first, by conducting a more limited
- > experiment.
- >
- > I promise to take into serious consideration any remarks that are
- > framed in polite language.
-
-
-
- _____
- <5.1> How does anonymity relate to group moderation?
-
- mjo@msen.com <Mike O'Connor>:
-
- > About the only time I'd support restricting Usenet groups would be
- > in the event that I was the moderator and wanted to be
- > extra-careful that someone from an Anonymous server didn't manage
- > to post to a moderated Usenet newsgroup.
-
- John Stanley <stanley@skyking.OCE.ORST.EDU>:
-
- > Why shouldn't anonymous postings be allowed to moderated groups?
- > For those groups, there IS a moderator who HAS been elected to
- > filter the material that gets distributed. Anonymous posters who
- > post inappropriate material do nothing but get their postings
- > rejected by the moderator.
- >
- > Those that post appropriate material should get their postings
- > approved. Why shouldn't they be? By definition, the content is
- > appropriate for the newsgroup.
- >
- > The current moderation system is more than capable of handling
- > anonymous posting. No new system needs to be invented to deal
- > with the few problem users who are anonymous.
-
- Lasse Hiller|e Petersen <lhp@daimi.aau.dk>:
-
- > If a newsgroup wants to be noise- and nuisance-free, then it
- > should call for moderation. This should happen on a per-newsgroup
- > basis, and not as a general USENET ban on anonymous postings. Of
- > course one principle of moderation might be to keep out all
- > anonymous postings, and could be achieved automatically. It would
- > still be _moderation_. Personally I would prefer moderation
- > criteria being based on actual content.
-
- David A. Clunie (dclunie@pax.tpa.com.au)
-
- > If a "group" doesn't want to receive certain posts it should
- > become moderated - there are clearly defined mechanisms on
- > non-alt groups for this to take place. An automated moderator
- > excluding posts from certain (eg. anonymous) sites or individuals
- > could easily be established. If anyone wants to take such a
- > draconian approach then they are welcome to do so and good luck
- > to them. I doubt if I will be reading their group !
-
- David Weingart <phydeaux@cumc.cornell.edu>:
-
- > the unmoderated groups can and should accept postings regardless
- > of origin...that's the point of having no moderator. If the
- > _moderator_ of a moderated group decides not to accept anon
- > postings (and it's within the groups charter), then fine, and
- > that should be in the FAQ (if it's not in the charter, the
- > moderator should be replaced ASAP).
-
- Richard Depew <red@redpoll.neoucom.edu>:
-
- > You may not like my "Automated Retroactive Minimal Moderation"
- > script, but you must at least admit that it is simply an
- > automated version of moderation - a well-accepted practice in
- > newsgroups that want to keep an acceptable signal/noise ratio.
- > You may protest that I have bypassed the usual mechanisms for
- > establishing moderation, and you would be right. I have brused
- > some USENET traditions while trying to protect others.
-
- David A. Clunie (dclunie@pax.tpa.com.au)
-
- > No-one has appointed you as the moderator of all the non-alt
- > groups retrospectively or otherwise, and no-one is likely to
- > appoint anyone else in such a position either.
-
- Richard Depew <red@redpoll.neoucom.edu>:
-
- > You are right, no one has appointed me to the post of
- > minimal-moderator. It is a volunteer position with, I assure
- > you, miserable fringe benefits. I will gladly relinquish the
- > position when the opportunity arises. :-)
-
- John Stanley <stanley@skyking.OCE.ORST.EDU>:
-
- > Neither you nor Dick Depew nor anyone who happens to volunteer
- > were elected to moderate any postings to unmoderated groups.
- > Moderating the postings to a group which has voted to be
- > unmoderated is an action directly in opposition the the chosen
- > method of operation for a group. Dick doesn't have the right to
- > issue cancels for them, and you don't have the right to moderate
- > them.
-
- Richard Depew <red@redpoll.neoucom.edu>:
-
- > It seems that *they* thought a moderator would junk *all*
- > anonymous postings. So, I decided to beat a sword into a
- > plowshare, and give them a taste of what they were wishing for.
- >
- > *POOF* -- Automated Retroactive Minimal Moderation
-
- Dan Veditz <daniel@borland.com>:
-
- > Geez, Dick, this is exactly what we tried to tell you before you
- > activated ARMM--an unmoderated group has invited anyone,
- > anywhere, to contribute, and when groups get too noisy *for
- > whatever reason* members of the group can decide to moderate
- > *that group*.
-
-
- _____
- <5.2> Should group votes be held on allowing anonymity?
-
- Jon Noring <noring@netcom.com>:
-
- > in general, I fear even letting newsgroup readers vote on either
- > allowing or not allowing anonymous posting, since a priori they
- > *cannot* know all the motives of *legitimate* posters, and I do
- > not believe that any system should ever be instituted that would
- > inhibit the posting of legitimate and informative posts.
-
- Tim Pierce <twpierce@unix.amherst.edu>:
-
- > Of course, how does one determine whether a "group" requests the
- > service? A flat majority of posters voting in favor? A positive
- > margin of 100 votes? Or what? No one speaks for a newsgroup.
-
- Richard M. Hartman <hartman@ulogic.UUCP>:
-
- > It is facist to suggest that a newsgroup is best able to decide
- > whether it wants to allow anonymous postings instead of having
- > them forced upon them by an service administrator?
-
- Johan Helsingius <julf@penet.fi>:
-
- > I have also blocked access to groups where the readership has
- > taken a vote to ban anonymous postings, although I feel changing
- > the newsgroup status to moderated is the only permanent solution
- > for newsgroups that want to "formalize" discussion.
-
- Richard E. Depew <red@redpoll.neoucom.edu>:
-
- > Does this ... mean that you are volunteering to issue a Request
- > For Discussion to ban anonymous postings or to moderate each of
- > the 4000+ newsgroups that your server can reach? I don't think
- > so, but this illustrates the trouble that your server is causing!
-
- Richard M. Hartman <hartman@ulogic.UUCP>:
-
- > I suggest that future RFD's consider the question of anonymous
- > access as a separate issue from moderated/unmoderated. I feel
- > that the two types of control are entirely different and not to
- > be equated with one another.
- >
- > I also suggest that, in the interest of preserving the status quo,
- > either:
- >
- > 1) ALL groups except those previously served by dedicated
- > anonymous servers be considered "inaccessable by anonymous
- > posting" unless and until that status is changed by
- > a vote in news.groups.
- >
- > 2) (less draconian) All groups in sci, news & comp hierarchies
- > be considered as above. talk & misc default to "accessible",
- > and I'm open to suggestions about "rec".
-
- Afzal Ballim <afzal@divsun.unige.ch>:
-
- > What you are proposing is a change in behaviour of certain
- > newsgroups (that they do not get anonymous posts) but without
- > informing the people WHO READ THOSE GROUPS of this change. You're
- > default is that groups should vote to change your change. I think
- > that the default should be the opposite: that groups should vote
- > to deny anonymous voting and that such votes should be respected
- > by those who set up anonymous servers. I would also hope that
- > providers of anonymous posting services would realise that they
- > must shoulder a burden of responsibility for those who are using
- > their service so that misuse can be minimised
-
- John Stanley <stanley@skyking.OCE.ORST.EDU>:
-
- > The precedent exists, and the votes have already been held. ...
- > Every unmoderated group has already voted to allow anonymous
- > posting.
-
- _____
- <5.3> Should anonymous posting to all groups be allowed?
-
- Wes Morgan <morgan@engr.uky.edu>:
-
- > I'm not suggesting that we should ban anonymous servers; as I've
- > said, there are several situations in which anonymity is a Good
- > Thing (tm).
- >
- > However, the notion that anonymity's shield should be
- > automatically extended to every Usenet discussion is ridiculous;
- > it opens the door to further abuse.
-
- Tim Pierce <twpierce@unix.amherst.edu>:
-
- > I'm not convinced by the arguments that an anonymous posting
- > service for all newsgroups is inherently a bad idea, simply
- > because it's a diversion from the status quo. Since the status
- > quo previously permitted anonymous posting to *no* newsgroups,
- > any anonymous posting service would reject the status quo.
- >
- > For any newsgroup you name, I bet I can envision a scenario
- > involving a need for secrecy. If an accurate content-based
- > filter of each anonymous posting could be devised to screen out
- > those that don't require secrecy, wonderful. But it can't be
- > done.
-
- Brian W. Ogilvie <ogil@quads.uchicago.edu>:
-
- > Limiting the service to alt groups, or specific groups, would not
- > help those who want advice on sensitive issues in more
- > 'professional' newsgroups.
-
- Jon Noring <noring@netcom.com>:
-
- > Though many have personal philosophical arguments against
- > anonymous posters, their arguments have not been compelling
- > enough to convince me that omni-newsgroup anonymous posting
- > should be banned or severely restricted. Though I cannot prove
- > it, it seems to me that those who do not like anonymous posting
- > (in principle) do so for reasons that are personal (read,
- > psychological discomfort) rather than for reasons related to
- > maintaining the "integrity" of Usenet.
- >
- > Remember, it is impossible to be able to ascertain all the
- > conceivable and legitimate motives for anonymous posting to
- > newsgroups one normally would not deem to be "sensitive".
-
- Dennis Wicks <guru@halcyon.com>:
-
- > As has been pointed out before, there is a reason why someone
- > would want to post anonymously to any given news group and it is
- > close to tyranny for the "readers" of any given group to "decide"
- > not to allow anonymous postings. I, and many others I am sure,
- > read news groups that we hardly ever post to. But when I decide
- > that I have something to post, and I feel that I have good and
- > sufficient reasons to do so anonymously, nobody else has the
- > right to decide whether or not those reasons are valid. The only
- > person who can do so is me.
-
- Richard M. Hartman <hartman@ulogic.UUCP>:
-
- > All I REALLY would like to do is put "anonymous postings accepted:
- > Y/N" on the RFDs AND change the default assumption for groups on
- > the "serious" hierarchies (comp, sci, news) to NO.
- >
- > And finally, bear in mind that I am not against anonymous postings
- > per se. I am against the assumption that ALL groups should be
- > served by default. This could always be changed by a vote in
- > news.groups for any individual group. I think that sci, comp &
- > news should be defaulted to NO, rec I don't really care about,
- > talk & misc should be defaulted to YES.
-
- John Stanley <stanley@skyking.OCE.ORST.EDU>:
-
- > The group votes have already been held. The "default assumption"
- > for unmoderated groups is that anyone may post. Only by changing
- > the English language so that "anyone" no longer includes "anyone"
- > can you change the "default assumption" of who may post to a
- > group.
-
- Vincent Fox <vincent@cad.gatech.edu>:
-
- > I wold certainly support anonymous service for
- > alt.sexual.abuse.recovery, etc. SCI.MED is certainly not an
- > appropriate place for UFO conspiracy theories. And the
- > "whistle-blower" argument is pretty thin. If you want to to blow
- > the whistle on some conspiracy or criminal actions, do it through
- > the newspaper or the courts!
-
- Karl Kleinpaste <Karl_Kleinpaste@cs.cmu.edu>:
-
- > I didn't "sour" on the idea of universal anon access; I was never
- > sweet on it in the first place. I have never once, ever, in any
- > posting, objected to anon access where the inhabitants of the
- > group in question welcomed it. My objection is, and always has
- > been, to infliction of universal anon access _as_a_default_.
- > Nothing stronger.
-
- Richard E. Depew <red@redpoll.neoucom.edu>:
-
- > Anonymous servers are part of the normal flora of USENET. The
- > normal flora are fine, and even beneficial, in their place. A
- > *global* anonymous server is not part of the normal flora. It
- > was a new phenomenon. I thought of the anonymous messages from
- > anon.penet.fi to newsgroups that had not invited them to be like
- > the spreading of an organism that is part of the normal flora of
- > the skin into the blood stream which is normally sterile. Sepsis
- > is a serious threat to the health of the infected individual even
- > in the absence of serious symptoms. I felt USENET was at great
- > risk.
-
- Tarl Neustaedter <tarl@coyoacan.sw.stratus.com>:
-
- > I will admit, I would sleep a lot better if Johan hadn't made
- > allusions to re-starting it on a global basis when he gets a
- > different feed. In its current form, his service is a net benefit
- > to the net. It was only in the net-wide incarnation that it
- > became a magnet for criticism, by inflicting the results on
- > people who had no interest in anon server experiments.
-
-
- _____
- <5.4> Does anonymity have a place in `serious' or `scientific' areas?
-
-
- Tom Mandel <mandel@netcom.com>:
-
- > I cannot speak for others but I regard anonymous postings in a
- > serious discussion as pretty much worthless. ...views that hide
- > behind the veil of anon are hardly worth the trouble of reading.
-
- Tarl Neustaedter <tarl@sw.stratus.com>:
-
- > some of us find anonimity in technical
- > matters to be profoundly offensive; anonimity in different forums
- > has different meanings. If I get a phone call from someone who
- > won't identify himself, I hang up. If I get U.S. mail with no
- > return address, it goes into the garbage unopened. If someone
- > accosts me in the street while wearing a mask, I back away -
- > carefully, and expecting violence. In a technical discussion,
- > anonimity means that the individual isn't willing to associate
- > himself with the matter being discussed, which discredits his
- > utterances and makes listening to them a waste of time.
-
- Joe Buck <jbuck@forney.berkeley.edu>:
-
- > You obviously have never submitted an article to a refereed
- > journal, where you will receive anonymous reviews through a server
- > (the editor) that behaves much like the one in Finland (e.g. you
- > may reply and the editor will maintain the anonymity). ... Your
- > comparison of someone who wants to express him/herself on a
- > technical issue anonymously with a person who approaches you on a
- > dark street with a ski mask is just emotionally overwrought
- > nonsense; such posters pose no physical threat to you.
-
- Dave Ratcliffe <dave@frackit.UUCP>:
-
- > What possible need would someone have for posting anonymously to a
- > sci.* group?
- >
- > Anonymous posting have their place in CERTAIN groups. If I or
- > anyone else needs to tell you what those groups are then you've
- > been on another planet breathing exotic gases for too long.
-
- <00acearl@leo.bsuvc.bsu.edu>:
-
- > Remember, this is a newsgroup for posters writing about SCIENTIFIC
- > issues. Anonymous discussion of scientific issues leads to bad
- > science.
-
- Wes Morgan <morgan@engr.uky.edu>:
-
- > I wondered why people would want to post anonymously to technical
- > groups.
-
- Tal Kubo <kubo@zariski.harvard.edu>:
-
- > One obvious reason is that personal disagreements could assume
- > professional proportions. I've witnessed situations where
- > something very similar has happened: two people who first
- > interacted as antagonists in heated discussions over the net, met
- > in person. The results were not pretty. Luckily that was merely
- > a social situation; but imagine the same problem compounded by
- > professional implications. For example, an academic might
- > criticize another's work over the net, only to have his
- > non-anonymous posting come back to haunt him in a tenure or grant
- > decision or some such professional activity. I'm told that at
- > business schools, students are advised to be polite to be each
- > other, because the person they snub today might be their boss
- > tomorrow.
-
- Shannon Atkins <satkins@midway.ecn.uoknor.edu>:
-
- > This sort of anonymity serves no purpose other than providing a
- > way for "adults" to avoid responsibility. Anon posters who
- > desire to flame or criticize other people don't have to weigh the
- > possible consequences of their posts - the use of good judgment
- > goes out the window. My policy goes something like this: if I
- > don't feel strongly enough about the issue at hand to make a
- > personal statement, I don't post, and if the consequences of a
- > post seem to great or I simply don't have the balls to post it,
- > I don't post. Naturally, this cuts down on my posting volume
- > somewhat, and I try not to waste bandwidth firing off
- > inappropriate and unfounded accusations and observations unlike
- > the more abusive sect within the group of anon usersmore. I
- > guess it just requires too much responsibility for some people to
- > realize that you don't snub someone without a damn good reason -
- > name-calling won't substitute for arguing a point successfully.
- > People may not like you for pointing out their flaws in logic,
- > but they will probably respect you.
-
- Wes Morgan <morgan@engr.uky.edu>:
-
- > While I fully support whistleblowers, I have to ask a simple
- > question. I ask this from the perspective of the whistleblowers
- > themselves, not as a third party looking in........
- >
- > IS USENET THE PROPER PLACE FOR SUCH ACTIVITIES?
- >
- > ... the notion of Usenet as a channel for professional
- > whistleblowing or career disputes seems to be a disservice; I
- > just don't see it as the proper forum, and it offers little more
- > than the feeling of having something off your chest.
-
- E. Johnson <johnson@access.digex.com>:
-
- > Obviously, no one posts anonymously on groups like
- > sci.physics.research or sci.nonlinearity. That is not because no
- > controversial opinions are discussed (although most that are are
- > beyond the reach of the rest of us :>), but because, in general,
- > these people understand what they are saying AND ARE PREPARED
- > DISCUSS AND/OR DEFEND IT.
-
- Lyle J. Mackey <lestat@wixer.cactus.org>:
-
- > I personally don't believe that pseudonymous postings are
- > appropriate in a serious discussion area. If there is a
- > LEGITIMATE reason for concealing the posters' identity, perhaps,
- > but simply because they're not so sure if they want their name
- > attached doesn't qualify as LEGITIMATE in my book. (Oh, and if
- > you can come up with a legitimate purpose for anonymous postings,
- > please, enlighten me.)
-
- Stuart P. Derby <sderby@crick.ssctr.bcm.tmc.edu>:
-
- > Three of our (the U.S.'s) founding fathers, Madison, Hamilton, and
- > Jay, seemed to think "anonymous posting" was OK. The Federalist
- > papers were originally printed in New York newspapers with
- > authorship attributed to "Publius". I wonder if you would find
- > their purpose "LEGITIMATE"?
-
- _____
- <5.5> What are some testimonials for anonymity?
-
- Atul V Salgaonkar <avs20@ccc.amdahl.com>:
-
- > I am very grateful and appreciative of this service , courtesey of
- > penet.fi. Some important questions about my personal
- > life/career/job were resolved due to kind help of other people
- > who had been thru similar situations. In return, I have also
- > replied to anon postings where I thought I could make a positive
- > contribution.
- >
- > In general, anon service is a great, in my opinion, although like
- > any tool some people will not use it responsibly. I suggest that
- > it should be kept alive. Wasting bandwidth is less important than
- > saving lives, I think.
-
- Elisa J. Collins <us273532@mmm.serc.3m.com>:
-
- > I have been informed that the anonymous posting service to many
- > newsgroups has been turned off as a result of discussions in this
- > newsgroup over people abusing it.
- >
- > I had been posting to a nontechnical misc newsgroup about an
- > intimate topic for which I felt I required privacy. I have
- > received immeasurable help from the people in that newsgroup, and
- > I have never used anonymity to behave in an abusive, immature, or
- > unethical fashion toward anyone.
- >
- > Please, folks, believe me, I *need* this service. Please
- > consider my point of view and permit admin@anon.penet.fi to turn
- > the service back on...
- >
- > Thank you.
-
- Kate Gregory <xtkmg@trentu.ca>:
-
- > In misc.kids there are three threads going on started by anonymous
- > posters. One was about changing jobs so as to work less hours,
- > job sharing and so on, from a woman who didn't want anyone at her
- > current place of work to know she was thinking of looking for
- > work elsewhere. The next was from a woman who is thinking of
- > having a baby sometime soon and doesn't want coworkers, friends,
- > family etc etc to know all about it, but who wants advice. The
- > third is about sex after parenthood -- actually this was started
- > by people posting in the usual way but then it was pointed out
- > that the anonymous posting service might let more people
- > participate.
- >
- > Misc.kids doesn't seem to be suffering any harm from the presence
- > of anonymous posters; in fact it seems to have been helped by it.
-
- Dan Hoey <hoey@zogwarg.etl.army.mil>:
-
- > a recent use of the anonymous posting service on sci.math seemed
- > seemed to be a student asking help on a homework problem. It has
- > now been attributed to a teacher, asking for an explanation of a
- > dubious answer in his teaching guide. He says his news posting
- > is broken, so he is using the anonymous service as a mail-to-news
- > gateway.
-
- Rick Harrison <bbs-hrick@jwt.oau.org>:
-
- > I read "sci.electronics" regularly and have found the occasional
- > anonymous postings about pirate radio transmitters and
- > electronic-genital stimulation to be much more interesting than
- > the typical postings there. In other newsgroups like "sci.crypt"
- > (cryptography) I imagine anonymous posts could be used by people
- > who wanted to leak information to the public without getting
- > fired or penalized for such acts.
-
- David Weingart <phydeaux@cumc.cornell.edu>:
-
- > Seriously, the amount of traffic from anon users on the sci groups
- > is so low as to make it a non-problem; I've seen a ton (or tonne,
- > if you're from a metric area) of roboposts and egregious
- > statements from non-anon users on the sci hierarchy (flip through
- > sci.skeptic and sci.physics sometime), and given that track
- > record, it seems that it would make sense for the NON-anonymous
- > users to be banned from the Net, since more of them do
- > antisocial things like lying, flaming, and writing apps to cancel
- > other people's messages.
-
- Robert MacDowell <bobmacd@netcom.com>:
-
- > So far there's been no indication of a specific *problem*, just a
- > lot of hypothetical hyperventilating on the part of numerous
- > paranoids here. Maybe I missed something, but I haven't seen any
- > anon-posts that were actually a problem.
-
- Solomon Yusim <syusim@bcm.tmc.edu>:
-
- > I think it's most unfortunate what was done to Julf and his
- > server. A few of my patients told me that they're using the
- > server in order to connect with others and form support groups
- > about issues about which they couldn't even think of speaking
- > publicly. They may not be willing to say this here openly, but I
- > feel that it behooves me to say this on their behalf.
-
- Deeptendu Majumder <gt0963d@prism.gatech.EDU>:
-
- > I never had much reason to read this newsgroup. anon service, for
- > me, was a way to post to groups where I do not have posting
- > privileges through normal channel (like this one). Groups like
- > alt.suicide.holiday where I have met people whose experiences had
- > helped me to deal with lot of my depressive feelings..No I am not
- > suicidal..but depressive ,yeah at times..anonymity was not a need
- > for me. But I do think it was very unfortunate the way the
- > shutdown was conducted..A country where people are so dependent
- > on shrinks...and green $$$$..all because nobody has the time to
- > be a friend..
-
- Steve Summit <scs@adam.mit.edu>:
-
- > Little story: I am, or once thought I was, a well-regarded
- > comp.lang.c "personality." (I still maintain its FAQ list.) But
- > I was getting bored with posting (again, what I thought were)
- > excessively high-quality articles to it, and I was getting too
- > concerned with upholding whatever reputation I though I had,
- > bending over way backwards to insert misunderstanding- and/or
- > flame-preventing disclaimers, and stuff. Lately, however, I had
- > been thinking it would be great fun to post similarly high-
- > quality articles anonymously -- among other things, there's a
- > certain (childish) thrill involved in being "somebody else" and
- > being a little bit secret. In fact, just tonight I composed two
- > such articles, which were the ones which bounced with the "server
- > shut down" message.
-
- Wes Morgan <morgan@engr.uky.edu>:
-
- > Another oft-cited case is the mathematics professor who complained
- > about his office, lack of net access, et cetera; this has been
- > put forth as another valid example of 'necessary' Usenet
- > anonymity.
- >
- > How about the mathematics professor who posted anonymous to verify
- > a solution in the textbook he was using? As I understand it (I
- > didn't see the original posting), he would have been embarassed
- > to admit that he didn't understand the given solution.
-
- Bill Bohrer <bohrer@maui.mcc.com>:
-
- > Then again, what *about* some net.terrorist posting hurtful
- > obscenities on a "support" group anonymously? Or the "Kill the
- > Fags" posts that pop up all over the place? In my years of
- > net.cruising though, the KTF crowd as I've dubbed them seem quite
- > certain of their moral righteousness, or at least the backing of
- > the ugly net.mob; they rarely seem to post anonymously
-
- John A. Munson <jmunson@uwsuper.edu>:
-
- > As things stand there seems to be a whole lot more angst over the
- > activities of 57 anonymous "abusers" than there ought to be. As
- > long as there are unmoderated groups, there will be abusive
- > posts, regardless of whether or not there is anonymous posting
- > available.
-
- <an1017@anon.penet.fi>:
-
- > I feel that the users that abuse the service are a minority. I
- > believe there are better ways to deal with them than shutting
- > down the entire operation and denying a large segment of the
- > UseNet population use of the service.
- >
- > I am not is as skilled or knowledgeable as most of you when it
- > comes to UseNet so maybe there are issues I am not taking into
- > consideration. But from what I've seen of the banter on this
- > group there has been no good reason to shut these services down
- > and deny access to thousands of other users that don't have your
- > powers.
-
- Johan Helsingius <julf@penet.fi>:
-
- > But of course this political situation is mainly caused by the
- > abuse of the network that a very small minority of anon users
- > engaged in. This small group of immature and thoughtless
- > individuals (mainly users from US universities) caused much
- > aggravation and negative feelings towards the service. This is
- > especially unfortunate considering these people really are a
- > minuscule minority of anon users. The latest statistics from the
- > service show 18203 registered users, 3500 messages per day on the
- > average, and postings to 576 newsgroups. Of these users, I have
- > received complaints involving postings from 57 anonymous users,
- > and, of these, been forced to block only 8 users who continued
- > their abuse despite a warning from me.
-
- Nancy Osberg <nosberg@scott.skidmore.edu>:
-
- > Thank you for so clearly targeting US universities as the source
- > of the problem for anon service shutting down. I have responded
- > to a few people who posted here anonymously and I don't believe I
- > have ever said or done anything illegal, harmful, degrading, or
- > abusive. I think it would have been much nicer to leave that
- > part of your posting out instead of including an ENTIRE group of
- > people who are not ALL responsible for the problem.
-
- Bert Medley <medley@sun44.synercom.hounix.org>:
-
- > The problem, in many people's eyes, wasn't "abuse" but
- > "accountability". They used "abuse", with several flagrant
- > examples, as the reason. I saw no posted actual documented
- > statistics of abusive posts versus rational or non-abusive posts.
- > The small sample I had on this group leads me to believe that
- > the number of abusive posts were inline with the ratio of
- > non-anon posts.
-
-
- _____
- <5.6> What are some testimonials against anonymity?
-
- Erik Oliver <eoliver@ralph.cs.haverford.edu>:
-
- > And further that the penet server is not a good or useful service
- > as it stands now, but just a veil to shield people from taking
- > responsibility. For example, the poster who wanted to be able to
- > ask for information about illegal cable decoders.... HMMMM...
- > Yes, we should really protect this sort of behaviour.
-
- Evan Leibovitch <evan@telly.on.ca>:
-
- > The morally righteous one are not the ones who do damage, you know
- > ahead of time where they're coming from, and can choose to either
- > confront or ignore what they say.
- >
- > Indeed, I have seen a rise in KTF ["Kill the Fags"] in alt.sex
- > from anonymous postings, as well as KTJ postings in
- > soc.culture.jewish. There'd also been a steady rise in the "two
- > word" postings, from people who didn't have anything intelligent
- > to add to a conversation, but figured that a few well-placed
- > smartass remarks would have everyone a-titter.
- >
- > Have I kept examples? No, it's hardly the kind of thing I'd want
- > to archive.
-
- Karl Kleinpaste <anonymus+0@charcoal.com>:
-
- > At this point, I am seriously uptight about server abuse and the
- > seemingly inevitable death-by-abuse which such servers suffer.
- > Consider that in just the last 12 months, there has been the
- > death of the alt.personals server at layout.berkeley.edu, the
- > alt.sex.bondage server at wizvax.methuen.ma.us, the
- > multiple-group server on Godiva, and now the universal-group
- > server on anon.penet.fi.
- >
- > It appears that a ratio of abusive:legitimate users sufficient to
- > cause an anonymous server's death is approximately
- > 1:2000. Hence, the sensitivity to abuse of the server is tuned
- > well into the "hyper" range of the dial.
-
- David Sternlight <strnlght@netcom.com>:
-
- > viciously offensive and scatological anti-Arab posts have appeared
- > in talk.politics.mideast, and viciously offensive and sadistic
- > posts have appeared in rec.pets.cats. In both cases the purpose
- > was to offend, and the poster refused to desist when asked.
- > Further, the policy of the anonymous site is to warn such
- > people--well after much damage has been done.
-
- Richard E. Depew <red@redpoll.neoucom.edu>:
-
- > We have just seen a prime example of the harm that can come from
- > anonymous posting in the case of an8785. This bastard, who
- > started the whole discussion in news.admin.policy by posting his
- > "Challenger transcript" to sci.astro -- thereby leading several
- > readers of that newsgroup to ask news.admin.policy whether
- > something "can be done" about him, posted a greatly exaggerated
- > version of my limited "demonstration" of ARMM to the far corners
- > of USENET including such newsgroups as comp.org.eff.talk,
- > alt.privacy, sci.space, sci.astro, rec.arts.books, alt.evil,
- > alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.religion.misc, alt.censorship
- > and, rec.arts.sf.written. These postings included the names and
- > addresses of my boss and the system administrator of my
- > work-place, despite the fact that my postings carried an
- > organization header that read "Organization: Home, in Munroe
- > Falls, OH".
- >
- > This anonymous bastard was spreading libel, harassing me in these
- > newsgroups, and inciting a lynch mob to harass my colleagues at
- > work with the clear aim of getting me fired or otherwise
- > disciplined. I am convinced that what he did is clearly illegal
- > under several US statutes, and if he were a non-anonymous poster
- > I could have sought satisfaction in the courts with charges of
- > libel, harassment, and incitement to harassment, and I could have
- > sought damages and an injunction to prevent similar attacks in
- > the future. However, because he was posting through
- > anon.penet.fi, and because Julf refused to divulge his identity,
- > there was absolutely nothing I could do about him.
-
- "somebody":
-
- > The service at penet was being used to slander and harass people
- > who had no recourse to stop it until damage was done -- if even
- > then (I have reports that complaints were not resolved). I sent
- > Julf parts of two messages that would probably result in
- > *criminal* legal action in Canada, Great Britain, and maybe the
- > US -- not against him, but possibly against sites carrying the
- > messages in Usenet. Furthermore (and I cannot give details at
- > this time) there is at least one case where the service was being
- > used to support and organize an active conspiracy to violate
- > several Federal laws in a major way.
-
- Rob Knauerhase <knauer@pegasus.cs.uiuc.edu>:
-
- > The problem, as has been endlessly discussed, was the abuse of a
- > mostly unnecessary service. Had it been limited to
- > alt.I'm.afraid.to.use.my.name, it would have perhaps been
- > acceptable. However, that was not the case.
- >
- > I bid anon.penet.fi good riddance.
-
- * * *
-
- This is Part 3 of the Anonymity FAQ, obtained via anonymous FTP to
- rtfm.mit.edu:/pub/usenet/news.answers/net-anonymity/ or newsgroups
- alt.privacy, alt.answers, news.answers every 21 days.
- Written by L. Detweiler <ld231782@longs.lance.colostate.edu>.
- All rights reserved.
-
-