T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
243.1 | anon. notes | BRAE::BUSDIECKER | | Sun Mar 22 1987 18:09 | 6 |
|
I also support anonymous contributions, but only through the established
channels (I agree with Steve's reasoning on why the established procedure
should be used).
- Linda
|
243.2 | anonymous to all but a moderator | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Mon Mar 23 1987 10:05 | 15 |
| I agree with Steve. It is good to have a channel for anonymity,
however there is some liability involved in anything published.
Although I do not see any way that there might be any legal/dec-
policy need to contact the author of the original note (234), I
think that the channel should be there. At this point I don't see
any reason to make topic 234 hidden, but a policy should be set in
place for all future topics.
...Karen
p.s. for some reason, which I don't understand, 234.0's method of
anonymity offended me. Perhaps becuase it's not anonymous enough.
I'm glad I don't know anyone who belongs on that node, and I'm
sure glad that I don't.
|
243.3 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Mar 23 1987 10:17 | 8 |
| I suppose I should clarify one thing. When I said I would likely
have hidden the note had it appeared in H_R, the reason would be
that the H_R moderators take personal responsibility for notes
very seriously. H_R has a posted rule forbidding anonymous notes
not contributed through the appropriate channels. Our brushes with
danger in the past have made us more sensitive and cautious.
Steve
|
243.5 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Mon Mar 23 1987 11:04 | 10 |
| I prefer that anon contributions be posted thru one of the moderators,
but am prepared to tolerate those that are posted thru anon accounts
PROVIDED that the anon feature is not being used for malicious
purposes.
Given that the moderator posting the submission can keep her/his mouth
shut (and if not, a new moderator is needed!) moderator-posted material
is even more anon than if a special-purpose account is used.
=maggie
|
243.6 | alright you perp, hands up! | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Playing with Fire | Fri Mar 27 1987 13:36 | 8 |
| Speaking as system mangler myself I understand the concern about
folks creating bogus accounts. However, we have folks here at the
center that have figured out ways to fake mail addresses without
having to create accounts. There is always a way for those determined
enough to find it. I support sending to the moderator and stopping
all the guessing games, and keeping the system managers out of hot
water. The rules for EASYnet are already a hassel, lets not give
a reason to have more. Liesl
|
243.8 | FORWARD JETSAM::SYSTEM | HERBIE::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Tue Apr 07 1987 09:53 | 18 |
| re .7:
> This seems like an unenforcable rule. I will not live by it.
Does this mean you will now start creating bogus accounts in open
defiance of the request to either sign your statements honestly,
or post anonymously through a moderator?
The rule may be unenforcible, but I do not think that it is
unreasonable. Why will you not live by it? Do you only obey rules
that are enforcible?
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
243.10 | So, start your own | MAY20::MINOW | I need a vacation | Tue Apr 07 1987 11:28 | 23 |
| Tom, the problem is that, by submitting anonymously, you are breaking
an implied agreement you have with the moderators of this notesfile
to play by *their* rules.
You are perfectly free to create a WOMANNOTES notesfile "on your own
dime" and compete with this file for the attention/interest of the
Dec community. In *your* file, we would have to play by *your* rules,
here, we play by theirs.
By the way, I feel there is a need for truly anonymous notes (where
not even the moderators (or personnel) can determine the author).
Such notes, however, should be labelled as such -- not submitted
by a fake name or from a bogus node -- and treated with less respect
by a moderator (who may choose to forbid them altogether).
For example, suppose I was a rapist who wanted to explain why I was
compelled to attack women. This is certainly relevant to the purposes
of this notesfile, but I would be a fool to let anyone know who I was,
no matter how much they professed to respect my anonyminity.
Martin.
|
243.12 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | | Tue Apr 07 1987 13:25 | 7 |
| Until a system for posting notes completely anonymously is developed
and installed, I think it would be reasonable to ask a friend to
post an anonymous note if you are not comfortable asking the
moderators.
Of course, that depends on the friend, your trust level, and how
much anonymity you are seeking!
|
243.13 | guest account could work | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Your all STARS team, CSC/US | Tue Apr 07 1987 17:36 | 7 |
| One alternative to the problem of truely anonymous notes would be
for the hosting system to provide a guest account that was available
to all. Then any entry from that account could have come from anyone.
The problem is whether the Telecomm folks would allow that. We have
some accounts like that at the center that are used to provide mail
distribution lists so anyone can send mail to the entire population
of CX03. Liesl
|
243.14 | my -$.02 | BEING::MCANULTY | sitting here comfortably numb..... | Wed Apr 08 1987 17:39 | 17 |
|
Unfortunatly, guest accounts are worse. In a simple notesfile
that is just a suggestion box, the guest account was used
horribly. (correct grammar ?)..anyways....There will always
be that hit and run incident with the notes. Once one person
gets the password, many others will soon have it, and trash
will start appearing from the account. I stick with having
Marge enter the anonymous notes (if she wants to). As far as
I can see, she has done a good job of doing it so far, and has
not divulged any identities. If someone enters a note and
has not complied with the rules of the conferece, it should
be deleted (read anonymous). After all, one shouldn't enter
a conference, without reading the rules.
Mike
|
243.15 | They are doing the job right, gentle noters. | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Wed Apr 08 1987 20:50 | 75 |
| From experience, the moderators of this file show a very good
understanding of the realities of noting at DEC. Their ban of
anonymous notes (which merely comes down to demanding that
people sign any notes posted from generic accounts) has been
quite effective in other conferences for minimizing the troubles
caused by "hit and run" anonymous notes. As should be obvious,
it relies quite heavily on the fact that most people are helpful
and co�perative and will comply. Being able to be absolutely
enforced has never been a requirement for effective rules or
laws.
As to the question of whether moderator rules can or should be
stricter than the policies found in the P&P manual, they
certainly CAN and should be. First of all P&P doesn't represent
the full body of DEC corporate policies. DEC policy is an
intentionally vague thing. Rule #1 is "Do the right thing". DEC
rewards this even in the face of P&P violations and punishes
doing the wrong thing even when there is no relevant P&P policy.
This is a fact of life at DEC and we've all seen it in action.
Beyond that, *corporate* policy constitutes a very small part of
policy at DEC. Most policies at DEC are set at much lower levels
than corporate-wide. This, too, is a DEC policy--"Decisions are
to be made at the lowest level possible". The policies of the
field are different from those of Engineering which differ fron
DIS. Beyond that groups, cost centers, departments and
individual nodes on the net have policies.
Moderators have no choice but to apply the plocies of their
system, of the cost center to which they belong, of their site,
etc. etc. up the line. They are also free to make policy for
themselves as regarding the running of their conference. These
policies need to be in keeping with all of the policies above
them, and especially with "Do the right thing", but the
moderators do have corporate support for setting their own
rules.
Beyond that, it may very well be necessary for the moderator to
set policy--policy beyond that defined from above. For instance,
several months ago we had an incident of alleged harassment in a
conference that I moderate. The offended party and the author of
the offending note worked for rather remote parts of the company
and had no common management below the VP level. The problem,
therefore, came to the direct attention of a VP. His reaction
was that any conference that could cause trouble like this
should be shut down. The conference continues to exist today
only because we were able to demonstrate that as moderators we
had adopted and enforced a set of rules for the conference.
Basically, in our neck of the woods, in order to survive a
conference must never have any problems which come to the
attention of "officialdom" *OR* it must have a set of rules that
management perceieves as sufficient to make problems highly
unlikely, and a set of people willing to say "we are responsible
fro seeing that these rules are enforced". It is moderately
clear that the rules by which a conference is run must be more
specific than the rather broad policy statements found in P&P.
When troubles occur in this conference, the moderators really
*HAVE* to formulate policy to handdle them and to prevent them
from happening again, at least assuming that continued existence
of the conference is a goal. To date, they have done that. They
are, at present, casting about for the best way to handle a
couple of types of problems, but they have clearly demonstrated
their willingness to work the issues and to take responsibility.
They should be commended and supported by those of us who value
the conference. Those who feel that the rules put forth are so
bad as to be unacceptable should either try to convince the
moderators off-line or put together a competing conference and
let the net decide. (It may not, by the way. It may support
both. There are 20000+ noters and that's enough to accomodate
quite a bit of duplication.)
JimB.
|
243.16 | | HERBIE::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Fri Apr 10 1987 10:50 | 25 |
| re .9:
Would it make any difference to you if in 1.* the word "rule" was
replaced by "request"?
Really, that is all that the moderators can do. They ask that people
abide by certain rules in the use of this conference. What is so
unreasonable?
I do not think that posting anonymously itself that is the problem
but doing so maliciously.
Who are you?
No, I was not addressing the problem of generic accounts and generic
names. I was addressing your statement that you will not obey the
rule/request about anonymous posting. Why won't you? Just because
there is no way to enforce it?
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
243.17 | Anonymous mail to moderator | TLE::FAIMAN | Neil Faiman | Fri Apr 10 1987 10:56 | 13 |
| Re the suggestion that some contributions may be so personal
that even "moderated anonymity" is not adequate (the hypothetical
"Why I am a rapist" note):
Anyone who has access to a truly anonymous mechanism could
use that mechanism to send the note to the moderator. The
posting would then still be at the moderator's discretion,
and under the moderator's control, while not giving up the
submitter's anonymity. Of course, the moderators would want
to show exceptional discretion in posting notes whose authors
even they didn't know.
-Neil
|
243.19 | How interesting... | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Fri Apr 10 1987 13:46 | 20 |
| Is this an example of something that often happens? If it is, can
we work out ways to deal with it or is it essentially an immutable
artifact of being human?
Tom, you say in .18:
"
> Would it make any difference to you if in 1.* the word "rule" was
> replaced by "request"?
Yes it would. Polite requests are always appreciated as opposed to
demanded conformity.
"
The word "rule" is *your* word, not mine. I actually *did* say
"request". How do you suppose it got so twisted? What's going
on?
=maggie
|
243.21 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Sun Apr 12 1987 11:18 | 4 |
| uh, Tom, I'm confused: the request you quoted and responded to in .7 is
not the one you now say that you meant. Could you explain?
=maggie
|
243.22 | | JETSAM::REZUCHA | | Mon Apr 13 1987 12:24 | 13 |
| I am unable to find the note to which I thought .7 was a sequel to.
The one I was searching for was the one stating that the offenders
manager would be contacted by the moderators. In a previous reply I
had asked whether anyone else remembers that note number. No one
replied and I do not have time to do a SEARCH of the conference.
This seems to be a dead issue as all vocal (?) entries have been
in support of the moderators policy and those who do not support
the moderators (if any other than myself exist) are silent.
Keeping up with this conference is a challenge!
-Tom
|
243.23 | aHA!! | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Mon Apr 13 1987 12:42 | 11 |
| Now I think I understand better, Tom. You thought that the note
requesting that anon entries be made via a moderator somehow had the
same draconian penalties attached to non-compliance as had been
proposed for guerrilla noting in the preceding note.
Sounds like you were **really** upset by that other note.
=maggie
(The guerrila-noting note was deleted after the will of the community
became clear, btw... which is why you can now no longer find it.)
|