In my estimation, the larger and broader a group is, the more it'll approximate human culture and interaction as a whole. It shouldn't be a surprise when the negative parts of those things (e.g. war, strife, hatred) emerge, just as much as the positive things (peace, fellowship, love).
Yes and no, I think. Physical space has some constraints that counter this in a way online spaces don't. Take a place like NYC, for instance, where there are so many people, from so many parts of the world, that it arguably begins to "approximate human culture and interaction as a whole." What you see here is that people start to subdivide the space and agree on expected behavior -- in public spaces, like the subway, people by and large try to reduce interactions. Then there are public spaces that are pseudo-private, like bars or cafes or restaurants, but each have their own understood rules -- at a bar you can start to talk up a stranger, at a restaurant you don't just walk to a random table and join in a conversation. There are also many private spaces -- apartments, or your own room in an apartment shared with roommates.
Contrast that with the typical online space, where it's not just that there are lots of people, but also no constraints. It's the equivalent of going on to a subway and yelling at someone about politics...
I don't think the problem with the modern internet is scale so much as a failure to build some constraints into its design. Everything is public at a very loud volume.
If you want to regain the pseudo-privacy of physical spaces online, put your community’s conversations behind an authentication barrier and disable full text search of conversations.
Search engine indexing is what turns a pseudo-private space into a humiliating-public one.
It’s okay to let search engines index your forum’s existence, the sub forums it contains, and their descriptions. But do not let them index participants or conversations - either by subject, by participants, or by content. And do not offer full text search of post content to authenticated members. It’s okay to index keyword tags, but that’s it.
If you do this, you will regain the semi-anonymity that made the early Internet possible to enjoy. If you don’t, you will continue to suffer the trolls and abuse that full-text search enabled in the mid-90s (see also DejaNews, X-No-Archive: Yes, and Google’s purchase of DejaNews).
EDIT: If you truly feel that full-text search is so valuable that it must not be withheld, you have to do a lot of things to defend against abuse attackers - for example: charge money for search credits, deduct credits when they choose to reveal the text of results, warn users that their searches will be monitored for abuse, require users to be in good standing with paid membership and posting activity for at least 90 days, etc. Otherwise trolls will just use stolen cards to perform full content searches to identify users to harass and then report their findings back to a central forum. They may still do that after all the above criteria, but they’ll have to work excruciatingly hard at it. Yeah, they could manually scrape the site, but you can defend against that too (“you’ve participated on 12 days, so you’re allowed to view 12 days of old content” is a good simple test).
I feel like you're right about some communities, and wrong about others, and it's interesting to distinguish the two, because I don't think this is a distinction anyone usually bothers to make.
There are some communities where the same community divides its activity across multiple channels. Your average "same small group of people, different channels" Slack or Discord server is this way. IRC communities also usually end up this way after they grow to sufficient size, forking off channels of #foo-offtopic, #foo-announce, #foo-help, etc. phpBB forums are/were well-known for their structure of forums with subforums (where most forum admins would set up even more subforums than anyone needed, just because they could) but where there were certainly always separate "news" and "chat" and "on-topic" forums.
But other "communities" (more like societies, I suppose?) like Reddit, or Usenet, or Twitter, do basically none of this constraint-based splitting. You'll get topic-based splitting, but this doesn't change the tone of the conversation at all. It's less like being in a separate place with its own rules, and more like just having your conversation tagged with a topic so that people can find conversations like that.
I find that the only time this type of community/society seems to work, is when it generates entirely coincidental non-connected member subgraphs, i.e. when its members aren't just a random sampling of the larger community/society's membership, but rather mostly their own cultural enclave that happens to use the community/society's social network as a gathering place. Then they can have (probably mostly implicit) rules that are different from the free-for-all of the larger society's.
There are also [sub-]communities with specific explicit rules, like Wikipedia, or /r/AskHistorians/. I feel like these aren't really relevant to the question, because the explicit rules often cause a selection effect in the membership who bothers posting, such that it's not much different to just picking those particular people and saying that only they can post. So you can't really use them as an example of how to solve the problem of general Internet discourse being shitty.
Can you speak more concretely what you mean here?
Are you talking about technical "constraints" into protocols such as "http" or "TCPIP"? Or constraints into DNS? Or constraints on HTML markup language?
What would an "internet technical architecture designed to prevent negativity" actually look like? Is there an example repo on github or a computer science research paper showing the algorithms that would satisfy this ideal?
It's more like having thousands of parallel NYCs, each one focusing on just a specific subset of the overall culture. To your point, they're still public spaces though where anyone can come in and yell about their thing, that is undeniable (and it happened).
Except people are a product of context, so putting them into a new context creates a new breed, the new yorker, of which no human being aspires to.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eternal_September
The zeitgeist definitely changed as the general public gained access. Prior to wide availability conversations were close to Hacker News posts in that people were mindful to be constructive and meaningfully contribute to conversations. But that was only in the macro - there were still pockets of poor behavior and even groups dedicated to different standards, notably the alt tree was meant to be looser and groups like alt.flame were no-holds-barred.
Similar to modern-day memes, one of the alt.flame threads inspired a tshirt (which I still have, somewhere) sporting the quote "Go jump in a goddamn volcano, you f.... cave newt." And like memes of today you need some cultural literacy to get the reference, much less for it to be funny.
The Internet has simply grown too large over the past couple of decades for any unmoderated public space to not be taken over by people who don't care about community norms, individual bad actors, organized invasions, and psyops.
Usenet could handle the first two in small doses: people who don't care about community norms will eventually learn or leave, bad actors will get bored of trolling, and persistent individuals can be killfiled. But both of those two flooding in in large groups can kill a community. If bad actors harass and attack every new person every time they post something, the community can't grow. and enough people in a community who disregard the existing norms will simply cause the Overton Window to shift, establishing a new normal. And a killfile isn't a large-scale solution: when you have to have a triple-digit killfile just to get past the noise and actually see the useful discussion, the community is dead.
Usenet on the other hand has never been resilient against coordinated activity. The Meow Wars were one of the most deleterious things to ever happen to Usenet back in the day, and I'm sure it contributed a lot to people abandoning Usenet for moderated web forums.
Now that the Internet has had 20 more years to further develop invasion techniques, and the invading forces are even larger and more malignant than ever, unmoderated communities can't survive unless they're invisible. Even heavily-moderated communities have trouble handling incoming raids from 4chan and 8chan.
And then you have the subtle psyops, groups stealthily infiltrating others in order to promote an agenda. Imagine a coordinated effort to have new people join a newsgroup for a TV show and slowly push the Overton Window towards normalizing antisemitism. This is hard to detect and root out even in a place with moderators (see: Stormfront's psyop in /r/videos), and unmoderated spaces are completely helpless against this kind of assault.
The public square serves a vital purpose in public discourse and society at large, but it isn't actually where great ideas are born; it's where they're tested. Traditionally, salons and small groups are where great ideas are born and polished before being presented to a public. Otherwise, you're fighting a low signal-to-noise ratio that hampers motion.
Both are necessary. Neither is superior. They are complements.
I'd hived the idea from elsewhere, and this piece discusses it in the context of trying to form a new community (largely failed), but the ideas may interest:
https://old.reddit.com/r/MKaTH/comments/4ntf5p/public_privat...
Experiencing the transition has made me value small communities much much more.
A lot of the challenges today are related to community size. Also, a lot of the problems are either solvable or already solved, but just relate to platforms wanting maximum user growth/monetization so they disregard those early learned lessons. Just take a look at the stuff Randall Farmer has written. These are lessons dating back to easy online communities in the 1980s.
A: Remember when 4chan was good?
B: 4chan was never good.
This is true for just about every community.
I was heartbroken when I've realized that one of the forums was hosted by an ISP that is no more. I've got some content archived, but damn did I feel weird like some part of my life is gone, wiped off the face of the internet.
You can read more here if you like: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eternal_September
(AOL users were notorious for block quoting long parts of text they agreed with, and reposting with Me Too! above. It's like "This." but less hip, if that's possible.)
In the meantime, though, there was a similar but smaller network that operated in a similar fashion: FidoNet's Echomail system. For younger readers, FidoNet was a network of dialup BBS systems (usually single-user) with a central list of nodes distributed weekly. Echomail was an add-on that worked in much the same manner as Usenet; a message posted in a forum would be propagated to other systems sharing that forum. Strictly speaking, both still exist today, but like Usenet, FidoNet is a shadow of itself, and most FidoNet nodes are using the internet instead of dialup modems these days.
I recall FidoNet having a lot fewer problems with spam and bad actors than Usenet, though, mostly because troublesome nodes could and did get de-listed.
Most ISPs provided usenet access just like they provided an e-mail address at the time. So it was no more difficult to be involved in usenet than it was to have e-mail.
In modern terms, usenet would be reddit if it was distributed (so anyone willing to set-up their own server could run a node and let people connect to it). But for end-users it was as simple as having an e-mail account and a client application on your computer.
Given the costs of that access and the costs of the computers. It was both a very small and a very specific type of person that was accessing Usenet at the time.
That in itself was a significant enough barrier to entry for the general public. Most people prior to Eternal September were unaware that the internet existed, or falsely believed it could only be accessed by university students. And outside of the G10 countries getting online was a major technical barrier.
On the positive site, I know of one intercontinental marriage facilitated by RAP.
I happen to have all three, and participated in Usenet just minutes ago.
You might want to delay your Usenet death proclamations by just a little.
[0] https://techcrunch.com/2009/04/27/time-magazine-throws-up-it...
>New users, new ideas.
> Mods ban these new ideas because they don't comply with existing culture
> Mods get heavy with their justice
>Core users are mistaken for newbies, and face mod wrath
> Core users migrate to new websites
Guess where HN is on this timeline
And then of course, the newcomers started taking the abrasive and politically incorrect culture at face value.
4chan has largely been a place where people can express counter-culture views. Whoever and whatever could not be criticized in public, that was the place to do it it.
The left is currently unable to directly admit to themselves that they are in power (they teeter on awareness of it: where once they were concerned about tone-policing and voices being silenced they now say things like "deplatforming works") in the universities, the news, the entertainment media, and so on. And so 4chan (although largely /b/ and /pol/) is the place where you can tweak the noses of the left just as it was once the place to tweak the noses of the Scientologists, the right, and so on. Should the pendulum actually swing the other way, you would see the shift.
My archives of the chans dates from 2005 onward. You can see the expression of what was "naughty" shift one way or another tacking into any political or cultural wind.
In any case, 4chan's "solution" has been to simply embrace the idea of Eternal September and say, "it's up to YOU to ignore things you do not like." Having watched various communities succumb to stifling moderation like HOAs descending into controlling nightmares, I would say that there's a very crude wisdom to the approach.
Usenet exists. I read daily and post regularly.
Just came here after a little Usenet session.
...don't forget that the supposed golden age of Usenet included a bunch of assholes, and that you could usually call or email their sysadmin at their university / work and get that person to have a quiet word.
But even the cranks had a certain elan. The made up private research centers in the email sigs were optimistic: Paragon Institute of Cyber Consciousness, and such
Whats interesting about IRC, with xdcc peer to peer file transfers, it already acted as a distributed peer brokerage back in the mid 1990s. Trying to bootstrap a laer like that today requires enormous overhead
Back then studying for a PhD was almost the defacto minimum requirement to have access. Few undergrads outside computer science had access.
As an illustration, back then, once I got into a usenet discussion with some called Martin Rees ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Rees ) on the nature of science.
People see Usenet and the wide-open access to all. What they fail to see, especially for its crucial first formative decade (1980-1990) was the very formidable gates that did exist: institutional access through selective research universities, and a handful of tech firms and government agencies.
It was a bit like Disneyland's legendary E-Ticket -- once inside the gates you could wander freely and sample at will. But there was a price to be paid to enter: technical ability, inclination, and most of all access to the institutions. Those institutions also provided a brake on some of the worse forms of abusive behaviour -- individuals could be identified, sanctioned, and removed from the system. The small number of site administrators (initially literally a handful, later still capable of fitting within a single conference room or lecture hall) also reflected a balance of centralisation and decentralisation which seemed to mostly work.
Much of what was good and bad about Usenet derived from these gatekeepers, and that is a point very often missed in subsequent treatments or discussions.
Otherwise, it was and still is the wild west in terms of content and quality.
Usenet itself may be a thing of the past but some of the useful elements can be reincorporated going forward.
Given how vicious and downright nasty politics can get in incredibly homogeneous small towns/organizations/communities, I don't think the size of a community has all that much to do with this.
As soon as everyone is not friends with everyone, people start behaving in incredibly shitty ways. If the community does not police that behaviour, the resulting interactions become quite visibly toxic.
If the community does police that behaviour, then they are still toxic, but in a less-visible manner.
I have to disagree. You don't have to keep them out, you just have to provide an option to mark and filter them.
Then, it's possible to see the full spectrum of comments and interact with everybody. However, if discussions become too big, the filters can be used to remove the noise.
Creating such a system will be brutally eye-opening for some people but it will inevitably come. The minimum viable product will be the Chinese social graph. If China plays its cards right, they have the tool to overcome Eternal September.
[0] https://www.reddit.com/r/joinrobin/comments/6398yp/what_was_...
Right. Anonymity plus the ability to create an unlimited number of accounts guarantees spam.
Originally, to have a USENET address you had to have an account on a time-sharing computer of moderate size, or run your own node. Both were hard to create in bulk, which kept the noise level down.
What can we use now? Facebook real names? RealID? Proof of work?
I mean that's over a decade ago now, but it seemed like it was still pretty big back then - albeit just for piracy.
Hahahah no. So the biggest problem of usenet wasn't really the throngs of the "Eternal September" people (I hate the expression, btw). It was that nearly every Usenet group had its resident troll with too much time on their hands and an extreme obsession. So you'd post about, say, plans to build a 2nd railway track between Chachówek and Radom, and you'd get some dude go at you about how useless that would be and how improving transport between Warsaw and Radom would destroy the public infrastructure of the entire country. This is not theoretical, I've stumbled on usenet archives from _a few years ago_ recently and have seen the dude still going.
And it was everywhere. Operating systems? Some journalist going off about how Mac's better than Linux in Every. Single. Thread. General "whine about the world" group? Some random libertarian to tell you that actually it's you who sucks.
It wasn't many people, but they were active enough to ruin everyone's day. You could mute them, but unless you muted every thread that included them (and nearly every did) you'd still be exposed to them. And, because I happened to meet a few of them personally: if you further restrict the space by means, credentials and "interest", all you're going to get is a higher concentration of these people.
This is what kill files were for, which every half-decent news reader of the time had (something that's still lacking in most contemporary web forums).
So trolling wasn't really a problem, because you could easily filter out the trolls. Same with spam, especially once Bayesian spam filtering was invented.
No, the real challenge that Usenet faced was the World-Wide Web. People were enamoured with the new shiny, with hypertext, and with embedded pictures and styling, which Usenet did not have.
Web forums were also a lot easier to use. You didn't need to download or learn to use a news client. All you needed was a web browser, which everyone already had and knew how to use.
Also, web search results on your topic of interest usually pointed you to forums, not to Usenet newsgroups.
If Usenet was better integrated in to the web, it might have stood a chance.
It started to fall apart when the nodes on the network included every ISP, etc. When people who have no authority over the participants, and no real punitive avenue if they broke conventions, it started to fall apart. Even if you got banned from that node, there were thousands of other nodes to jump to and continue your abuse.
[1] When you went to some university, the account they provided you was your authentication on Usenet. You had that single account and it was your sole key to the network.
The first time I "met" people who weren't involved in tech online was probably Friends Reunited (school friends) and then Facebook. Reddit, Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat and TikTok are all far more diverse than Usenet ever was (although I only ever use Twitter these days, so that might have changed).
I therefore can't accept your view that it had a dramatically diverse group of participants. It has an even less diverse group of users today, and it's worth remembering we should probably not talk about it exclusively in the past tense: it's still an active thing.
On the authority thing: the OP link suggests a public shared space has to be owned collectively, and therefore the policing model that Usenet lacked (other than a few good actors at the edge of the network like you suggest), will eventually be its downfall. We see this in unmoderated spaces all over the Internet today.
All public spaces are at risk of anarchy without some sort of policing, once populations reach a certain size. This is not a uniquely digital/online phenomenon.
I wonder if it's possible to create a protocol where policing is built in somehow, whilst retaining the public commons features that the OP desires.
I don't think it's exactly a matter of authority. A university wouldn't care about someone merely being a troll in Usenet; they'd have to be breaking a law or otherwise acting egregiously to attract disciplinary action.
Instead, I think it's a matter of reputation. A smaller community is one where everyone is likely to be familiar with everyone else on an individual basis, and a community with a technical barrier to access imposes a transition cost on someone wanting to take their ball and go elsewhere.
In my opinion, both of these things act together to change one's target audience and engagement style. In such small Usenet-style communities, a user is speaking to that community at large. In larger forums with less individual reputation and lower barriers to access, the forum instead becomes more of a performance place: people are speaking to a subset of like-minded supporters.
Twitter is a great example of a very large forum with a near zero-barrier, where I can shout at an adversary while speaking to like-minded people.
How so? It was universities, tech people in corporations and a few folks that just had PCs as a hobby. In short: upper middle class (because those things are expensive), educated (because it really wasn't as simple as it is today) and with time on their hands.
There may been some diversity in political leanings, but on the fundamentals, education, social class etc?
Who knew this was debatable. Every race, creed, religion, and demographic (even if skewed slightly to the higher end). Every political lean imaginable. People in sports programs, arts programs, and every other nature.
The notion that this group has some natural agreement is not reality based.
Indeed you are[0]
[0]: https://timeline.com/flame-wars-early-cyberbullying-1c509aa5...
If they'd included an NNTP reader, we'd be still using USENET to this day.
How does this square with Eternal September being caused by (paraphrasing) "too many normal users with access"? AOL giving its customers NNTP access is frequently cited as one of its downfalls.
Remember that usenet newsgroups numbers in the tens of thousands, usually focused on a very specific interest. New members joined either to gain knowledge, be among those who share an interest, or occasionally to troll. Trolls were easy enough to add to .ignore files, and the others had a desire for the benefits the newsgroup offered and thus were inclined to respect whatever rules were in place in order to receive that benefit.
The general model of a usenet group is echoed on the web with message boards, absent the unified means of distribution and discovery.
I understand spam is a problem, but its such step backwards from just subscribing to alt.whatever.
The glory days when NNTP was built-in to most email clients, so mornings were spent with a cup of coffee answering emails and keeping up with project conversations.
The future of our world looks to be hyper-siloed with incessant privacy leaking and no one actually seems to mind.
The Freenode IRC network is full of developers and users providing support for open source projects, and is still highly active.
For example, Freenode's #ubuntu, ##c, and #vim channels have about a thousand users each, and plenty of them are developers. There are plenty of channels for smaller projects too, usually with developers of those projects hanging around and answering questions.
Come join us! Sure, it's not Usenet, but it's not a proprietary walled garden like slack, discord, or telegram either. You can actually keep text logs of the channels you're in and IRC clients are pretty full featured. The only thing I miss from the proprietary competition is embedded images/video, the lack of which is sometimes actually a plus.
As a corollary I plan on writing a rfc to add SNI support to nntps, so you can virtualhost newsgroups for different domains (e.g. nntps://news.example.com/announce and nntps://news.corp.com/announce can be served from the same IP but refer to different groups).
Signing up for a new Discord account via Tor means you are prompted for a phone number, which is a single API call to a data broker away from full name, email, and home address.
You cannot join anyone's discord chats without the digital equivalent of showing an ID.
A lot of us mind. We're just being excluded from more and more conversations.
This only happens via Tor and oft-abused VPN providers. "Showing ID" has two benefits:
1. It helps mitigate a lot of unsophisticated spam attacks, taking off server load and annoyance off users.
2. It helps to some extent with mitigating criminal affairs because any potential criminal that falls in the gap between "doesn't realize IP addresses may leak location information" and "knows how to use compromised hosts as proxy" can be picked off by the authorities once they're noticed.
Anonymity is gone and it's not coming back. We have to adapt and we don't get a choice. At least there's some minor upsides to it.
From what I've seen in numerous channels for software projects on freenode, spam is not a problem on IRC. A project choosing to use discord/slack/etc instead of IRC is a real disappointment.
What I'd like to see is the ability to get a personal identity SSL cert with tooling (browser plugins, for example) to make it easy to use on signup pages. This personal cert could have several fields, depending on how much information the user revealed to the certificate authority.
The primary field would be how much they paid for the certificate. That way people can be as anonymous as they want, and can get new IDs if they need, but they have to pay for each one. Then forums could require new users to have a certificate that cost at least a minimum amount, whatever is required to keep trolls away (that is, trolls who constantly sign up with new IDs). I'm thinking that $5.00 should be enough for most purposes. (There would be a minimal cost to cover the CA's expenses, however anything above that can be specified by the user depending on if they want a bronze level or platinum level certificate)
There could be additional fields that the CA verified, such as name, address, etc. These could also be marked as "Supplied to / verified by CA", but not included in the cert (so only the CA knows that info, and can have a policy of destroying their records shortly after verification). Or if needed (such as for financial transactions), name and address could be part of the cert.
The whole idea here is that forums could better control when troll users register multiple accounts -- yes, with the "completely anonymous" version of the cert the troll could keep buying new ones, but that is still a higher bar they have to cross than they do now.
I wish it was this simple :^)
Consider Facebook, where people post mostly under their own name and photo. Even a casual visit to Facebook quickly reveals your hypothesis is wrong; it's nearly the exact opposite of reality.
Contrast that with HN, where users range from pseudonymous to fully anonymous, and where discussion is kept to a much higher standard.
It bears repeating - the discourse on HN is kept to a much higher standard. Active moderation and community guiding, performed by intelligent agents, is the real answer to the woes. Anything automatic, anything with a guaranteed outcomes will be 'gamed' and put to bad ends.
--edit--
There's also the separate but equally important matter of privacy. As internet spaces became both the town square and also gentlemens' clubs and also private homes to multitude of discourses, we need privacy from various actors' prying eyes.
Not sure what the solution is, but it would be nice to have some sort of ML-based approach that would tune the content I see to my wishes, rather than the wishes of the average denizen or the moderators.
This requires at the minimum logging IP address that someone signed up from, and treating with suspicion IP addresses that are pooled (such as from a VPN or TOR, etc). There are also other heuristics to prevent sock puppets and voting rings, each of these removing some amount of anonymity.
Whereas what i proposed, people can still maintain full anonymity, and if they really need a separate ID so that they can log in to the same forum under a different ID than they normally use (for things like whistle blowing, etc) then they have that option -- just buy another $5 (or cheaper, or more expensive) certificate.
It would be up to the forum (or the auto moderation system, for assigning points), to decide how much to trust a user with a new cert, based on how much they paid for it (as an example), or how much PII they provided to the cert provider.
Another thing this can do is allow someone to be anonymous, but with a chosen pseudonym, and allow their reputation from one site to benefit them on another site (by proving that a given reputation score belongs to them). Of course, this is almost sounding too much like a "social credit score", so it may not be acceptable on those grounds.
You're now reading a comment by that same person.
The fact of bad-faith actors under real names across multiple platforms is ample evidence that requiring real names is not itself sufficient. The examples of Homer, Voltaire, the Federalist Papers, Mark Twain, Willy Brandt, and numerous others shows that anonymity or pseudonymity can give rise to great works and thoughts. It's often the only way certain thoughts, or communities, can find voice.
Impunity seems far more likely a core problem, and one which, when identified as such, should be able to be addressed without necessarily piercing the veil of identity.
Technology is not the only realm of solutions -- social and civil conventions should also be explored thoroughly.
I hear this a lot, and I always feel that it's misguided. I believe the greater problem is proximity. The problem is proximity, not anonymity. ie, People will treat total strangers like trash if there isn't much proximity. For example, verified twitter accounts make comments that people would never make in a face-to-face interaction. (without an audience) And, you don't even need computers to witness this: road rage does not have a "walking rage" analogue. Normal, calm people who don't get into fights will treat another driver like trash. But the vast majority of them would never escalate this sort of confrontation if they were both pedestrians.
I'm not suggesting that anonymity can't contribute, but I don't believe it's actually the root cause. eg, HN is largely anonymous, and for the most part it's a very nice community. There are a few reasons for this:
- Heavy moderation of what articles are available for comment. (so, less moral outrage, and more informed discussion)
- Heavy moderation of inappropriate comments by the moderators.
- More importantly, heavy moderation of community values by community members: comments which disagree are completely acceptable as long as they're constructive and devoid of personal attacks, slander, etc.
- Most importantly (and most controversially) all of the above points, as well as the focus of HN create a gatekeeping effect. HN is generally full of thoughtful and intelligent people
If you want decentralized spam resistance at scale, Web of Trust is the only solution that works. To register, I contact a node that adds you for free by filling out a captcha, talking to them on IRC, etc. They add me at a trust level just above zero. If I start off by posting spam, my account instantly dies.
So I have to first post a bunch of productive comments that people respond to, and then I can start spamming.
Reddit is a corporate cesspool where marketing teams do "reputation management".
Today, You might think someone is sharing a deal on groceries, but in reality Aldi has carefully planned a post, buying accounts and upvotes.
When caught, marketing teams learn what people use to identify fake accounts, and make future accounts more legitimate.
Heck we still see this on Twitter with Trump. Identification should be optional but preferred.
I use the https://www.eternal-september.org/ free NNTP server. There are others.
https://old.reddit.com/r/dredmorbius/comments/3c3xyu/why_use...
(From one of the primary sources linked in TFA.)
Thanks!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Usenet_newsreaders
And you can get free access to the text groups (no alt.binaries.*) from, at least, either of:
Eternal September:
https://www.eternal-september.org/
or
AIOE
Source code sharing was pretty important I remember. That was how I first got Perl source code to compile, although it was probably not in the alt newsgroup tree, it must have been in some other that escapes my memory.
You could run a Usenet server without binaries, just to host the discussions and source code sharing and whatnot. But customers would have none of it: if you didn't have binaries, you weren't serving real Usenet, and they'd go to ISPs that did, and when ISPs generally stopped serving Usenet because it had become the world's lamest warez and porn distribution network, they moved to centralized NNTP services.
- When someone hosted a usenet server, they were actually downloading (and keep in sync) a complete mirror of the sort of “globally agreed-on data”. This was part of it’s biggest appeal that the time of limited bandwidth: you could connect directly to your ISPs server with low latency and it wouldn’t matter how busy the other servers were.
- The technology itself never supported binaries, it’s just that people figured out that you could encode binary data as text, post the text as a message, and have everyone else reverse the process.
- Some providers actually chose to only host some of the groups (alt.binaries.movies would be an easy one to avoid hosting for example), but that offered limited help if people decided to upload pirated content to other groups. As the restrictions tightened, many discussion groups completely lost the ability to discuss things when a “scene group” came in and started uploading hundreds or thousands of files as messages.
Looking back; I suspect that even if there was a restriction of 10KB per message and the same level of policing, piracy would still overwhelm usenet with millions of 10KB “messages” per HD movie
Anything truly a public space is going to be filled with things you don't like seeing. That's the messy part of real freedom for a whole crowd of people.
I recently wrote about 2k words on this exact topic:
From https://sneak.berlin/20200211/instagram/ :
> For a moment, put aside the fact that you may or may not want to read any of that, or spend time thinking about any of that. Any time that doesn’t happen, considering how many people are on the internet and the theoretical ideal of any-to-any communication, then some communications are being censored (or you’re posting about the weather/your kids). The why and the how of that censorship should interest you, even if you like or benefit from it most of the time, such as not seeing constant spam in your DMs.
> Who is permitted to create accounts to speak? What money, rights, privacy, or information must they give up to do so? Who doesn’t have access to the prerequisites for an account and is excluded from the public square? How many different accounts are people permitted? Can people create new accounts anonymously? How much or how often are they permitted to post? On which topics? How many people are they permitted to message? You can’t follow every single account on Twitter, for example. You can’t DM a million people in one day.
First, one must accept that bad actors exist, and that all forms of moderation are not merely attempts at political or cultural oppression.
Second, one must accept that all public spaces, both online and offline, enforce some degree of restriction on how one can legitimately interact with that space. I cannot, for example, walk nude in any public place, or shout obscenities at people with a megaphone without suffering both social and legal repercussions. Those repercussions are the result of society, even in the context of a "public" space, attempting to deal with a bad actor.
Online, one has the further restrictions imposed by the architecture of the software itself, beyond whatever rules are enforced by the nature and moderation of the platform. Hacker News won't let me make death threats or dox people, and the software won't let me upload pornographic images.
So, yes, dealing with bad actors is censorship. By your definition, merely requiring participants to obey the law is censorship. But "censorship" at that point becomes so abstract and general a concept that it ceases to become a threat to anyone but anarchists and bad actors, and becomes self-evidently necessary to have any kind of a civil society or constructive dialogue to everyone else.
Also, it seems weird to see an attempt at a full-throated defense of maximalist freedom of speech from someone who claims to require an NDA with a non disparagement clause for basic social interaction[0].
To use your example: do you think this is reasonable or just? Do you think it’s a sane thing to use force to enforce such a thing?
> Also, it seems weird to see an attempt at a full-throated defense of maximalist freedom of speech from someone who claims to require an NDA with a non disparagement clause for basic social interaction
If that’s what you read from that post or that comment, I have done a terrible job of communicating. You seem to have misread a discussion of social media’s corporate censorship into “full-throated defense of maximalist freedom of speech”, which it is absolutely not. If you re-read it carefully you will not find that conclusion supporter anywhere in the text—I specifically avoided it because I do not hold those views.
Then, again, when you parsed the circumstances under which I formally ask people to keep my private information private: it is drastically far removed from “basic social interaction”.
You seem pretty bent on fiercely mischaracterizing the things I have said or do.
If you’re not actively trolling and really have sincerely read these beliefs into the words that I wrote, perhaps a third bit of my recent writing may be relevant to you: https://sneak.berlin/20191201/american-communication/
I can only tell you that your beliefs of my views, articles, and life are inaccurate and not supported by the data available.
In the event you are actively trolling, well done. I slept on your comment before replying, because few things in the world make me type more fiercely than people making demonstrably false statements of fact about things I do or believe.
It should be kept to the minimum level sufficient. But time and again has proved that lack of effective moderation is far more fatal.
The people who bring quality discourse go elsewhere.
When all social communication happens via app on one or two platforms, and a dozen people have full access to every private communication for billions of people and the ability to decide what communications you can and cannot transmit via the primary and sometimes exclusive methods you use to speak to your friends and family, an extremely dangerous situation results.
It is within the power of Facebook, for example to selectively allow or disallow discussion of COVID/nCoV based on user, region, geolocation, location history, et c - even in DMs, even on Instagram or WhatsApp.
Imagine if a regime insisted that they censor a specific term or set of terms within their country, or be blocked GFW-style.
I doubt it’d even require that much new code. They already have DM censorship mechanisms in place to combat spam and other forms of automated messaging.
When you have no other contact info for those with whom you communicate, it gives them a point and click information blackout ability, even for “private”, person-to-person communications.
Everything from protests to genocide can be made impossible to discuss, and thus invisible.
They have full location history for a lot of users, too. Imagine them temporarily shutting off DMs for every user who has ever visited a specific location for the duration of some national security emergency specified by a government. Only temporary, of course - but suddenly the protesters of the concentration camps can’t send or receive any messages from anyone. Nobody else notices or is affected, so it doesn’t even make the news.
It’s an extremely dangerous state of affairs. I don’t even think Facebook realizes what a huge menace they have inadvertently produced, if for no other reason that I don’t think the national military in the country where most of Facebook’s SREs reside has pushed the issue with machine guns yet. Those guys don’t mess around.
Biggest factor I think that made the discussions better is that folks were not connected all the time so discussions would span days or weeks. You had time think between posts. Folks would log on once or twice a day. Obviously there were exceptions. Today a reddit thread has about a 24 hour shelf life because of its global nature, and then it dies. Furthermore the most intense discussions will happen in bursts and then flame out. People aren't engaging in discussion they are shouting their opinion into the ether and moving on.
Second factor obviously is the tremendously larger and more diverse population on the internet. More people mean more new topics posted and less time to discuss topics. The actors are less technical overall than those who had internet in the 90s and early 00s.
It plays out in other places, too. I've noticed that, since moving to Slack, the quality of electronic communication at my company has taken a serious nose dive. I think precisely because Slack makes it nearly impossible to have a deep conversation over a long period of time.
I've also noticed that the quality of discussion in face-to-face meetings tends to be inversely proportional to the number of people present. The more people, the quicker you need to be to speak if you want to get anything out there before the flow of conversation moves on and whatever you have to say becomes a non sequitur. The less time you can take to compose your thoughts before presenting them. The people who place the highest value on measured speech generally don't open their mouths at all, unless someone puts them on the spot.
The worst incarnation of this phenomenon that I can think of seems to be Twitter. Twitter doesn't host conversations. It hosts a conversation-themed massively multiplayer live action game in which participants compete for scorekeeping tokens known as "likes" and "retweets".
Reddit is also like Twitter. Karma has certainly evolved into a game. The focus on Reddit has always been to shift content to the "new" topics as well.
The primary difference between Reddit and Twitter, at least for me, is that I somehow became addicted to the former and could care less about the latter, despite trying.
Possible, instead of only small posts it should be only long posts or none at all.
I love that part already, even without reading the full article. Yesterday, I had an interesting experience (yes, storytime):
I started using a fountain pen again a while ago, and wanted to research why I've some pain in my wrist after using it[1]. So I stumbled upon an old thread, which basically asked how to develop a "well-refined handwriting"[2]. This thread was from 2004, so just short after when I started to use "the internet". The conversation was all in all very polite, respectful, with some tips from other members, and often some kind of "well, you could try it like this and that" or "I found something here, where xyz showed you could do it like this", "I prefer to do it like this, but ymmv.", and etc.
The thread spans 19 pages, and, interestingly, is still active almost 15 years later.
What stroke me the most was the change of tone towards the end. There was a lot more "you HAVE to do it like that", "THIS is how it WORKS!" and there like. Also, they started discussing what "well-refined" means at all. 15 years later. There was a lot of, let's say, "whining" towards the end of this thread (that school nowadays needs a lot of parental involvment, nothing works, and everything is bad).
I am left confused. Something has changed in the last 15 years, and I'm not sure what the reason is.
[1]: You guessed it: It has to do with the way I'm holding it. Now, back to topic!
[2]: //edited upon request, german page though: https://www.penexchange.de/forum_neu/viewtopic.php?f=17&t=37...
It’s probably wrong to call it that towards the many fine young users on any platform, but there is definitely some correlation.
There is also a trend when a social media platform becomes suddenly very popular : not all have the means, the inclination or the ability to be respectful.
As others mentioned, training people to be excellent towards one another and forming and following a netiquette takes time, and unfortunately needs to be enforced (even at HN which I feel has a pretty good to high standard for discussions and little tolerance for bad faith disruption)
No, please do link it here. First, there are many Germans here who would appreciate it. Second, people like me who cannot read German can still auto-translate the page to English and read it.
>IMO, this last aspect is what made Usenet truly special.
>The idea that no one was bigger than any given (news)group was baked directly into the software. Everyone held the keys to the castle. [...] Sadly, it seems we’ve given up on the idea of online communities as shared spaces — but studying Usenet is a great way to be reminded of what’s possible.
I took the opposite lesson from USENET history: shared spaces where _everyone_ has equal say and power is _impossible_.
(Much of my thinking in the following paragraphs is influenced by Clay Shirky but his essay seems to be deleted from the internet.[1])
Any digital shared space that needs to function for the long term will always create a formal (or informal) power structure where a subset have disproportionate influence. Therefore, any idealism of a shared space where everyone has equal say or power will devolve into unequal power. This has happened with all "digital shared spaces" of any significance outside of USENET such as Bitcoin (democratic home computers --> China ASIC miners), or Ethereum (a few influential developers choose to reverse the DAO hack), or Wikipedia (super editors with special powers to reverse edits). The repetition of that human history across many digital domains shows that only a subset will hold the keys to the castle.
I was an avid user of USENET in the 1980s. I learned C Language by asking questions in USENET (comp.lang.c). I also had my first long discussions on economics on USENET. I have a fondness for nostalgia but that doesn't change the fact that reddit/Stackoverflow/HN are far more useful to me than USENET ever was. I think that private ownership of those entities improves baseline quality of discussion. Sure, Mastodon is decentralized but the discussions there are not as interesting to me as the front page of HN. We techies don't like to admit that decentralization makes shared spaces worse on many dimensions which is why I abandoned USENET because it wasted too much of my reading time.
[1]https://www.google.com/search?q=clay+shirky+group+worst+enem...
HN might be the last forum working forum where I participate and it’s pretty topic specific.
There are still some dev projects that use irc (maybe pandas), but email is expensive to support because it’s 1:1 in that my answer only helps the recipient and it gets mixed in with all the other stuff.
I recently had a problem with the Altair python viz package and submitted a question on GitHub but found their google group [0] from searching and had someone help me in the middle of the night EST. That was neat.
I think my take away is that there doesn’t need to be a single protocol like nntp as long as there is effective search.
Although I do miss my morning coffee and Usenet. Phenomenal porn too.
I think he's right re: _equal say or power devolves into unequal power_
Maybe the key is not giving everyone equal power, but distributing power in away that captures each member's preferences for who should wield that power?
Usenet was also great due to it's subscription model with a pull paradigm. Instead of getting all emails in a mailing list pushed to you, you could pull only a selection of newsgroups and messages to read, depending on your mood. I loved this way of interacting with people in the nineties.
Like already mentioned, Usenet promoted thoughtful answers, as opposed to quick superficial answers like on IRC. I spent a lot of time on the latter, nevertheless Usenet was where I learnt critical thinking and massively improved my English. Thank you for that, rec.autos.sport.f1, a newsgroup which is still active by the way.
Having gone through a reasonable amount of Internet eras, IMHO the main roadblock to a perfect community, no matter which protocol is used, will always be an elevated number of users. Thus, a possible solution is to have more communities with less users.
There was no need to use dozens of different protocols or visit different websites. I remember I had my newsgroups grouped by topic like programming, operating systems, science, sports and so on.
EDIT: Also, I don't see "having more thoughtful discussions" as a good reason for needing to return to Usenet. Not every discussion has to be thoughtful, and really, most aren't.
More niche boards (most of which happen to be categorized as SFW) have some pretty good material, tend to stay on-topic, and are indeed suited well for a civil discussion. My personal favorites would be /o/ (anything car/vehicle related), /toy/ (for stuff like assembling/painting/working on models), /lit/ (for literature), /diy/ (self-explanatory), and /sci/ (science&math).
Yes, it isn't super concentrated serious material with no fun allowed, e.g., there are occasional threads where people do things like build a motorized bathtub and then proceed arguing about feasibility of making it street legal. But the quality of discussion there isn't that bad at all, and the moderators are pretty strict about banning people and deleting threads for either being unrelated to the theme of the board or for NSFW stuff on SFW boards.
If not directly implementable, a USENET-to-HTTP proxy running in the cloud (to address the issue the author identifies of "didn't need to be installed") could obviously be done (and has been done, or near to it, a couple times).
As it fell out of favor in the mainstream ISPs stopped supporting it/paying for it & it became a niche service to pay for separately, if I understand correctly, and the only people willing to pay (by and large) are people sharing pirated software, media, etc.
With a quick look on a partial NNTP server (requires registration), the only groups I used to look at that are still active is the old/retro computer one. Most of the posts are people still using these computers day-to-day, and finding problems with Javascript-heavy websites or outdated encryption.
I don't know what "store and forward" publication would look like today; the "common carrier" concerns about being responsible for something someone else posted to your spool seem to be larger and murkier today then they were back then.
At a certain point before that it was flying under the radar: most people seemed to assume that it was just text since that’s all the technology supported, but of course 7-bit encoding, multi-part archives, and parity files all had changed that. Once the rights groups got wind, the clock was ticking
Some “scene groups” chose to encrypt uploads and change post names, but that only served to splinter the usefulness of it since most of those became group specific.
For everyone else, it was ISPs committing more and more resources to fighting to keep illegal files off their network, and end-users scrambling to either grab stuff fast before it was taken down, or move to a grey market “full archive“ provider for a fee.
Somehow, as bittorrent took off, the newsgroup technology never ended up having to “pay the piper”. But that is definitely something that could happen very easily in current day.
My ISP had a Usenet feed up till 2010 and I was a regular poster in several groups from 1999 through 2014.
I'd love to see a general solution to this.
Much less important part: Usenet was full of horrible behavior for many years before people started complaining about "Endless September." If there was a golden age it was before my time (1985).
YMMV, of course, depending on which groups you frequented and their community norms.
pg's "A Plan for Spam"[1] provided a lower-effort solution eventually, but by then it was too late as the onboarding experience for new users had become hopelessly polluted and toxic (new email users at least had a grace period before their address was discovered).
This is the thing I really miss. The NNTP client I used in the late 90 / early 00s had a far better UX for dealing with large groups and complex nested threads (such as those seen in groups I used to frequent like comp.language.* and alt.fan.pratchett) than anything I've seen implemented via HTTP+HTML since.
Part of that is due to bandwidth constraints no doubt: the client was working from a local database of content that the UI was pulling data from for display so achieving everything it did on "old web" tech could impose a massive bandwidth cost on the provider and UI latency cost on the user, but with modern UAs this could be largely replicated with the various client-side storage options. There would still be an issue for users who moved between different browser instances regularly, a bunch of "read/purged/etc" data would need to be synced between clients via the service which increases the design complexity, but something noticeably better than most (all) web based forums offer should be eminently possible.
The article cites a couple of pieces addressing why Usenet died. I'm fairly familiar with one of those as I wrote it about four years ago: https://old.reddit.com/r/dredmorbius/comments/3c3xyu/why_use...
My thinking's evolved somewhat.
First, as noted, Usenet was small by today's standards, with Brian Reid and others' reports putting total active users at 140k (posting) from 880k with access, as of 1988, and just shy a million in 1995. Total worldwide Internet usage in 1996 was about 16 millions (through growing rapidly).
Those would be failed-social-media-site numbers today.
Usenet, like Facebook, formed on and around academic communities, and specifically highly selective institutions. This created several barriers to entry / points of control, which were both highly discriminatory and highly effective at helping dissuade some of the worst forms of misbehaviour. For a while.
The type of organisation of a discussion ... matters a lot. Usenet's fixed groups kind of worked and kind of didn't, and we've seen a few additional models come up since. Ad hoc structures (which Usenet didn't support at all), personal "salons" (think a typical blog -- Charlie Stross's comes to mind, also some social media hosts, Yonatan Zunger at G+ for those who were there). Location, time-centred, event/project based, and others. Clay Shirkey's concept of fluid organisations (something that can be dated back at least to Alvin Toffler's Future Shock, 1970, and "ad-hocracies") captures some of this.
The liability and business-model problems (both upside and risk) are really huge, and cannot be overstated. I suspect a number of social media / user-generated-content site/service closures, including quite probably Google+ and Yahoo Groups, have much to do with this.
Factors-promoting-growth and factors-promoting-continued-survival differ hugely. The elements which create a viable and attractive social network are almost entirely nontechnical. The elements which are required for a social network to continue once it's attained (or exceeded) critical mass are highly technical (though also call on a complex mix of other factors, business, social, legal, and more). Critically: the lessons and methods that get you successful won't keep you successful.
Founding cohort is a huge factor for initial success and growth.
Starting a new social network with the express goal of becoming the next Usenet, or Facebook-killer, or whatever, is almost certainly doomed to failure. Even more than starting any social network is. Probably better is to address the needs of a specific, paying, interested, and motivated community, from which there may be a future growth path.
Tim Ferris's downsides of fame article posted a few days back makes some really good points about bad actors and scale -- you only need a few dimwits at a million to a billion followers / fans before negative encounters start becoming really common. Human brains simply aren't built for mass social network interactions, whether as one of the many or one of the few.
Any concept in which nominal success criteria are principally predicated on scale means winner-take-all dynamics, and that there can be at most only one winner. Maybe a winner and an also-ran or two. Given numerous factors including several mentioned above, the winner will likely be determined based on starting conditions and a lot of raw luck. Possibly exchangable for ruthlessness.
We've existed in a technically-mediated world in which the winners have tended to be US or Wester-based private corporations. The next decade or several may see changes to that. US hegemony of the Internet has been strongly criticised. Several of the possible alternative hegemons don't strike me as notable improvements.
Given inherent monopolisation of technical communications, questions of closed vs. open protocols, and of private vs. public ownership and control, should be asked.
Changing open standards is extraordinarily difficult. I'm inclined to say impossible. More typically, they're supersceded. Sometimes by other open standards, increasingly of late, not. The reasons for all of this would make for some extraoridinarily interesting academic research across numerous fields.
Agreeing on how to do things is the most underrated technological innovation of the past 200 years.
Usenet's client-independence is often stated as a benefit. I've argued that myself. Given variations in message formats and posting behaviours encouraged by highly different client mechanics, I'm not so sure of that. The Web is the worst possible applications development environment, but it does impose, not infrequently by force of law, a consistent UI/UX and format. Supporting both a useful level of behavioural consistency and a diversity of access tools would be a good but challenging goal.
In my earlier Usenet piece I talked about the obvious advantages of decentralisation. I've been using several decentralised networks of late (Mastodon and Diaspora principally). I'm not so certain the advantages are entirely obvious any more. I think the questions "what problems is decentralisation supposed to solve, and what new problems is it creating?" need to be asked.
I'd like to believe decentralisation is a positive. I'm not sure I can.
And I was wrong about Ellen Pao and Reddit. She was doing well under an extraordinarily challenging environment, in which communicating basic facts was all but impossible. My apologies for my earlier comments.
What was it about Mastodon and Diaspora that caused you to reconsider the benefits of decentralized networks? Genuinely curious as I haven’t used either very much.
Both Mastodon and Diaspora are mostly working out quite well, and have done far better than numerous other platforms or services. Mastodon has active development and generally has been implementing new (and for the most part good) features at an impressive clip.
Diaspora not so much. Which is a significant concern of itself. Failure to sustain development is a concern. Diaspora has on the order of a million users (w/in an order of magnitude), and ... wants for love.
More generally, my sense has been that both platforms have some magical thinking about scaling and what dynamics will or won't appear, which may eventually collide with reality. Mastodon's had somewhat more experience with this to my knowledge, notably with an extreme and intolerant political group adopting the platform (and being promptly defederated by most of the rest of it).
But I've seen pretty regrettable behaviour by others, including numerous (mostly small) instance admins.
The Wil Wheaton incident, in which the actor was harassed and bullied by a small but hyperactive set, was quite regrettable. Lessons were learned from that.
Ownership, control, and continuity of larger instances has been iffy. I don't think "everyone rolling their own instance" will happen for quite some time. Which means that some level of multi-user tenancy, at scale, will have to be a norm for the forseable future. That's another issue, crossing numerous concerns.
The problem with Usenet was that it was that it slowly was infested with pirates (of the copyright kind), troll, netcops and spammers.
Don't forget the mentally ill, who ruined a lot of science newsgroups. It became hard to find solid discussion among university-employed experts once the newsgroup attracted cranks who wanted to propound their ideas, e.g. "Perpetual motion machines are possible!" or "I have deciphered Linear A!"
Even if you killfiled the mentally ill, a lot of the experts got bogged down in pointlessly trying to refute the cranks, so you would see their replies and it totally destroyed the group's culture.
That said, I am not sure why you find pirates a problem. Sharing binaries actually goes back to the golden age of Usenet, before Eternal September.
The reason pirates were a problem was they were the excuse for removing Usenet as a service for ISPs. Binaries were most of the bandwidth, legal and storage cost.
All we need, is for the OS distribution vendors to include a way to mount a global, public filesystem - without involving any third party beyond a DNS request.
Imagine if Linux and MacOS users could point their machines, immediately upon install, to a global filesystem - and start publishing to it themselves, directly from their own machine - without involving third parties, or servers, or whatever.
Alas, the OS guys won't do this, because they've decided to make money from ads and tracking peoples habits, so have stopped being decent OS vendors, these days.
But I keep thinking to myself, surely some kid is out there gluing IPFS and Debian together in a way that just makes sense. It really does make sense.
I guess, it'll happen soon enough. And when it does, so many big fish are going to find themselves hungry.
(Perhaps thats also why it hasn't been done yet.)
I haven’t used Usenet in years and the only people I know who still use it, use it for movies and music and stuff.
I spent a lot of time on alt.food.tacobell and alt.destroytheearth and alt.music and places like that.
They worked for the same reason bbs boards on fidonet worked. I think because there wasn’t anything better and they were hard to set up and use. So only people with enough time or passion or smarts to overcome the setup and management were involved.
I expect that once people stop trying to pyramid scheme crypto, we will eventually get some sort of “pay a penny per message with tips and escalating costs for violations” that is protocol based so can be run by volunteers rather than “core developers.”
It needs to be just confusing enough to keep out people, but useful enough to keep in enough people.
Believe me, I would ditch all of this tech and go back to 1992 in an instant if it was a viable option but let's be real: we've been discussing this in the semi-annul Fido and Usenet HN posts for years and yet, here we are.
The only way this could happen is if some techno-elites with name recognition decided to recreate it. Even then, it would probably die quickly. Remember Ello?
It also looks like there is a blacklist for Aether (https://static.getaether.net/Badlist/Latest/badlist.json). If you're concerned about using this application because someone might post illegal content, this could be used to prevent that from being a problem. (I'm not a lawyer though. There may still be legal risk in running software like this.)
I used to use Usenet in the early 90s, I was even a sysadmin at the time and helped my university install it. NNTP, huge hard drives, constant network stream, it was a big deal but so excited to manage and read it.
But I quickly felt the need to have some kind of upvoting system in order to wade through the noise. At the time, I used jwz' genius "BBDB" emacs extension, which allowed you to weigh posts based on authors and subjects. The potentially most interesting articles would magically bubble at the top of the discussion group and this would tremendously speed up my consumption of all the groups.
But obviously, this is not as effective as the crowdsource voting system that reddit uses. The combination of reddit's voting system (for the voting) and RES (for the customized author tagging) makes the reading a lot more efficient than Usenet ever was.
I personally don't have a problem with the fact that reddit is proprietary. The amount of knowledge and entertainment that I gain from reddit way outweighs my slight philosophical discomfort from the proprietary aspect.
And if one day, reddit fails to meet that criterion, another site will replace it. Digg has shown us that these sites are a lot less permanent than they seem.
In the late 90's my main access to it was via my ISP. It was one more reason to sign up.
> Surpassed in ease-of-use by browser-based forums (didn’t need to be installed)
At that time browsers came with NNTP clients. Both Netscape and Internet Explorer (in the form of Microsoft News and Mail, later Outlook Express, later Windows Mail). While the experience was better with a dedicated NNTP client, using the system didn't require installing anything the user wouldn't already have.
As a side note, I twice set up NNTP servers to replace e-mail discussions in two companies with reasonable success. Public discussions were so much neater in that format.
The problem that remains is still one of solving the abuse/spam/reputation problem, but there’s enough progress that hopefully this time things won’t collapse again :)
One anachronism that sounds almost unbelievable to younger internet users was this: another user threatened to (and did) take down my ISP and report me to my ISP "for abuse." It sounds so incredibly quaint in the 21st century, but time was you were expected to behave yourself online, potentially on penalty of your provider cutting you off. How times have changed.
The flaws they list I think are often not as bad as the alternatives. Additionally, there are mitigations for them, such as kill files, alternative interfaces, etc.
I also think that you should continue to use NNTP, both Usenet and otherwise (when making your own newsgroups which are not part of Usenet, I suggest Unusenet to avoid namespace collision; it uses reverse domain names as name spaces, like Java and some other stuff does; and like Usenet it can be federated, but usually isn't). This is a better alternative to mailing lists and web forums, although it is possible to have multiple interfaces to the same messages (you could have web forum, mailing list, and NNTP, all interoperable with each other).
I would like to find more Usenet (and/or Unusenet and/or others; I think there is also something called "Rock solid network", apparently?) newsgroups for some stuff I am interested to have, and would like to promote use of NNTP.
(I also think that those who make available Usenet archives should implement proper From-munging. The only one I downloaded so far, does not do this.)
Healthy social media must support and defend pseudonymity, because it’s the only way to juggle the fact that everything on the internet can be recorded by at least one other party. And the only way to defend pseudonymity is to treat every user the same. Twitter’s “approved” users violates this and Facebook violates it in many different ways, but Reddit just prioritizes communities over individuals. This is the root of the solution.
When people treat Reddit like it has some broad character or quality, I have to disagree. Those people just haven’t found a subreddit that they love, probably because they haven’t tried to. And I don’t think that needs to he changed or automated. If a Reddit-like site was the only social media, all these people would be motivated to create or build their own communities.
But it was the MP3s once music piracy got big that became huge. The weight of all those binary posts, plus the risk of housing child pornography is why most ISPs shut off access to Usenet.
Reddit is an excellent upgrade on Usenet. If you have a specific interest, it's usually well-maintained by a moderator or the subreddit dies. And unlike Usenet, the best comments usually bubble to the top, so you don't have to read every single comment, the voting mechanism works on well-run subreddits.
Perhaps that is a feature and a life-saver after all. Nobody should have a megaphone that can reach five billion people.
And what about Kibology - where is Kibo now??! ;-)
I would like to see AI moderated feeds of some sort, tuned to the preferences of the seed group. It would be a interesting social experiment at least.
The mobile phone changed the barrier to entry forever on Internet 1.0, but if the satco's decided to launch petabytes of storage into space and require a specific basestation/modem to access the signal, that small hurdle would limit participation to those that made an effort and effectively leave 99% of Inet1 behind.
Perhaps not the best example, but all it takes is a small technical hurdle to limit participation.
If you buy the principle, then a way to encourage quality posts and discourage poor posts would be to:
1. Limit the number of posts a person can make. 2. Reward posts that get responses with the ability to make more posts.
Obviously you'd want to add some filigree to these principles to allow members of a conversational thread to post with abandon once they've already joined.
This could be implemented in a decentralized way cryptographically. Subscribe to people whose vote you trust by accepting their cert, you can also have a web of trust.
Soooo the whole idea of returning to Usenet is part of your product pitch.
Can we get a giant asterisk on posts that are basically just advertisements?
People make communities. It's the people that are great and it's the people that suck. The key is how do you filter people who suck out.
Free agent still seems to work on Win8 :-)