T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1180.1 | | BIGRED::GALE | Ditto | Fri Sep 07 1990 23:39 | 27 |
| Dave,
I set the note hidden, as you well know by the mail you received from me
explaining why. If you insist, I CAN delete your note, but I didn't want
to do that yet.
The note was set hidden because there is a corporate policy of having the
authors permission first before posting their mail in a notes conference. I
have not seen that permission - (all I need is mail from the author
saying he has the permission, that way if Jack comes to us, we can
produce a document saying the author stated he had permission)
As you know by the mail you received, I set the rest of the topic
hidden so that when we get the permission, you won't have to re-enter
your note - I could have deleted the whole topic and returned it, but
choose to create EXTRA work for myself to save you from having to
repost (your welcome!!)...
I'm a little discouraged that you started this topic for (again) a
moderator bashing note, but if you REALLY feel you must, go ahead, I'll
be on a business trip for three days, so won't have to read it until
then :-)...
Gale (co-mod)
|
1180.2 | I'd better stop now....GRRRRRRR | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Fri Sep 07 1990 23:49 | 11 |
| re: .1
If we all lived by the LETTER of all the rules in this company, instead
of the SPIRIT, there would be no company to worry about.
I can just see it now, "I'm sorry Mr. Sales Rep, but your request
wasn't EXACTLY according to the rules, so I'm cancelling your visit to
my ACT and that's just too bad about the multi-million dollar order
that is dependent upon your visit. Better luck next year."
Bob
|
1180.3 | Right on | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Fri Sep 07 1990 23:58 | 7 |
| Re .2
Either you and I think alike or you just read my 'moan' in the MOANS
conference on this issue. You've just stated the problem more
succinctly than I did there.
Dave
|
1180.4 | Question Authority! | MISFIT::MICKOL | Member of Team Xerox | Sat Sep 08 1990 00:32 | 22 |
| The first thing I wanted to do when I saw that 'hidden' note was to criticize
the moderators and I didn't have any idea what the note was about. Now that I
do know, I'm even more pissed.
Here's a controversial suggestion:
Abolish the role of moderator for all the notes files and watch
Digital's productivity skyrocket. Many of you must have read the recent
Employee Involvement communication from John Sims; its say to "Do What
is Best for Digital". As Digital employees, we are to be trusted and
we don't need notes 'police' to make sure we follow the rules. We each
need to make our own decision as to what's best for Digital and If I
put an inappropriate note in here or any other notes conference, its my
responsibility and no one elses.
I have been a moderator and have been no more than an organizer and
administrator, not an enforcer or censor; as far as I'm concerned there is no
need to give this handful of people the power trip of hiding or deleting the
notes entries of fellow employees.
Jim
|
1180.5 | | MU::PORTER | it's 4AM inside my mind... | Sat Sep 08 1990 17:45 | 32 |
| RE .-1
Well, that's all very well, but no-one really "give[s] this handful
of people the power trip...". Moderatorship is not an official
position.
The way it works is that someone or someones decide to create a
notesfile, and they, the creators, decide what the rules for
the conference are - specifically, whether they need a moderator
wielding the act of censorship or not. They may very well
choose to select other moderators to assist them, but in the end
the decision very properly rests with the system manager of
the host machine.
So I think you have to abide by the rules of any given conference.
That's not to say you shouldn't lobby to have them changed - perhaps
if you demonstrate majority sentiment is on your side, the moderators
will relax a little.
You are also, of course, perfectly welcome to set up your own
conference (subject to the whims of your system manager, maybe).
You can even set up a rival to DIGITAL.NOTE; presumably, market
forces will operate the way they're supposed to, and people will
choose the one which they prefer.
Having established that I think that file ownership gives one
absolute say-so over policy (subject only to the rules of
decent civilized conduct, and I suppose DEC policy), then I'd
like to add that I think that censorship is generally ridiculous,
and in the particular case of the Smith memo headed "for wide
distribution", it was doubly so.
|
1180.6 | Just a comment | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Sat Sep 08 1990 21:35 | 6 |
| Strange. Some 'kind' soul, must have been a moderator
since no one else has the privs to do so, modified my .3 note so that a KP7
would open the MOANS conference. I'm not sure how I feel about my
notes being 'fiddled' with. No big deal, but I did notice!
Dave
|
1180.7 | Three meaningless words? | DEC25::BRUNO | IMT: We Document the World! | Sat Sep 08 1990 22:12 | 4 |
| This is odd. If "For Wide Distribution" is not a clear granting
of permission, then what is it?
Greg
|
1180.8 | I thought this was MOANS :-) | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Sat Sep 08 1990 22:57 | 5 |
| re: .3
I don't follow MOANS, so I guess we think alike.
Bob
|
1180.9 | All this would have been avoided if... | COUNT0::WELSH | Tom Welsh, freelance CASE Consultant | Sun Sep 09 1990 08:03 | 27 |
| All this fuss would never have happened if Jack Smith's
memo had been headed "DISTRIBUTION: ALL EMPLOYEES", rather
than "For Wide Distribution". The phrase he used is actually
meaningless, as "wide" is qualitative not quantitative.
Of course, if we all had the confidence to "do what's right",
then Jacks's phrasing would be suitable. Maybe he doesn't
realize how much paranoia is endemic among the rank and file,
or how many policies have sprung up of recent years which
are heavily salted with phrases like "immediate termination".
You can't have it both ways. Empowerment does not mix with
heavy handed corporate edicts. As the Soviets have recently
discovered, entrepreneurship does not flourish in the shadow
of the KGB.
Robert Townsend tells an amusing tale in "Up the Organization"
of a small bunch of people who set up their own company. At the
first meeting, it was decided that they would have an informal
culture, and set as few rules as possible. The discussion then
turned to the desirability of a dress code, and one enthusiast
suggested "Let's have a rule that nobody wears ties!"
"No", said the president. "That would be a dress code. People
can wear what they like - ties or no ties".
/Tom
|
1180.10 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sun Sep 09 1990 11:36 | 16 |
| Without moderators who take the responsibility placed upon them
by the corporation seriously, many conferences, such as this one,
would not be allowed to exist. Those of you who think that all
a moderator needs to do is "organize" obviously haven't been
called by angry vice presidents or been told by Personnel to
shut down your conference.
Moderators are volunteers. Very few take on the responsibility
out of a sense of being on a "power trip". Those of us who
put in the time and energy to moderate high-tension conferences
such as this one do so because it is a way we can contribute to
the good of Digital and to the benefit of its employees.
And putting up with topics like this one is part of the job.
Steve
|
1180.11 | | MILKWY::SLABOUNTY | Hemorrhoid from Hell | Sun Sep 09 1990 18:53 | 13 |
|
A message with the header "For wide distribution" is meant
to be posted ... especially when it deals with company hap-
penings.
If Jack didn't want it spread around anywhere, he probably
wouldn't have included that particular phrase. Instead, he
might have used something like "Confidential".
Sounds simple to me, but oh well.
GTI
|
1180.12 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Aut vincere aut mori | Sun Sep 09 1990 20:52 | 21 |
| A big part of the problem is that people don't fully label their
mail. Usually they don't need to. What they send is clearly for a
small group or for wide spread publication. On the other hand I've
seen a lot of mail lately that the authors intended for a small
select group and only that group that was forwarded widely around
the company because it didn't say not to.
VPs and SVPs should know enough to clearly label just how far things
should be sent. But they're real people and tend to make the same
assumptions that we all do about the people we send something to
knowing what the right thing is. They probably aren't always aware
that some people regard a VP memo as close to a message from god
that the whole world needs to know about.
As for overreaction, it doesn't take more then one call from "the
Office of the President" telling you that KOs memo in your conference
should not be there to make you a little shy about what you let stay
in the way of memos from high level people. Think it doesn't happen?
Think again.
Alfred
|
1180.13 | complain about senior management computer illiteracy | TOHOKU::TAYLOR | commonality where appropriate, diversity where profitable | Sat Sep 22 1990 17:18 | 21 |
| re: Note 1180.10 by Steve QUARK::LIONEL
To the moderators I say thank you for 'putting up with topics like this
one'. As one of the people that had their note set hidden, I was quite
surprised but understood it something the moderators felt they had to do
to comply with the 'rules'.
If various people wish to complain, complain about the high level
of computer illiteracy of senior management. If Jack Smith wanted
wide distribution of his memo, then he (or someone on his staff)
should have 1) sent an electronic mail copy to every employee, 2)
put the memo in VTX, and 3) posted the memo in a notes conference
rather than depending on ad hoc distribution.* At the very least,
someone on his staff should understand the technology and the
company rules well enough to correctly label the memo.
mike
* the ultimate irony is that the ad hoc distribution resulted in
a massive waste of resources as I received dozens of copies with
huge header and trailer mail-address lists.
|
1180.14 | | MU::PORTER | Nature Abhors a Vacuum Cleaner | Sat Sep 22 1990 23:55 | 14 |
| >of computer illiteracy of senior management. If Jack Smith wanted
>wide distribution of his memo, then he (or someone on his staff)
>should have 1) sent an electronic mail copy to every employee, 2)
>put the memo in VTX, and 3) posted the memo in a notes conference
>rather than depending on ad hoc distribution.* At the very least,
Referring to point number (1) above ..
How? "To: @DEC.DIS" ?
OK, I *suppose* that someone could have pulled out all
names from the Elf database - but not everyone bothers to
store a net address in Elf anyway. Do all DEC employees
read mail? Even production-line people? Or don't they
count?
|
1180.15 | How many weeks is Maynard from ........? | JGO::EVANS | | Mon Sep 24 1990 04:41 | 14 |
| re .13
Most of the time the "formal" distribution channels produce just
as many distribution lists because of the hierarchal setup.
At least with "informal" distribution the info generally arrives.
I have not yet received one of Jack Smith's memo via the formal
chain, but then Nijmegen is a long way from ............
j.e.
ps perhaps DEC in europe has declared independance?!
|
1180.16 | @DEC.dis should be possible | TOHOKU::TAYLOR | commonality where appropriate, diversity where profitable | Mon Sep 24 1990 09:46 | 11 |
| re: .14 & .15
When the company depends on "informal" distribution because the
"formal" distribution channels do not work, then there is a serious
problem.
Yes, there should be a @DEC.dis. True some people don't read e-mail.
But if a VP wants to send an E-mail message to every employee, then
should be possible.
mike
|
1180.17 | Lets not buy the paper | SAHQ::STARIE | I'd rather be skiing! | Wed Sep 26 1990 12:55 | 7 |
| If we do an "@DEC.DIS lets consider the impact when people print with
either vaxmail or the print with distribution lists (PWD) option in
All-in-1. The resulting paper costs could be a major cost impact.
Lets use VTX and Notes the way they COULD be used instead!
dick
|