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"John Fereira" wrote in message .. . bb wrote in : On Sat, 05 Mar 2005 23:09:08 GMT, John Fereira wrote: Sure, it's simple to delete posts that you're not going to read buy why should we? You don't need to bother deleting them, just have the willpower not to read them. When did I claim that I've been reading them? For about a week on a typical day I would open up my newsreader, select r.b.p. (one of about a dozen groups that I subscribe to) and will see that 50-100 new messages have been posted. From the subject lines I can see a handful of what appear to be paddling related articles so I pick them out and read them. I also see a bunch of threads that are clearly off topic, some with subject lines that are essentially calling one of the participants names. As is the case with most newsreaders, if I don't want to see the same articles the next time I read the group I have to mark the articles as read (even if I don't read them). So even though I'm not actually reading every article posted to the group I have to take action to indicate that I don't want to see them. Furthermore, when 80-90% of the articles posted are off topic, it become more difficult to find articles that *are* paddling related. This is a newsgroup about paddling. There are many other newsgroups in which political discussion, and even flaming is on topic. Those that want to read that kind of article can go to those groups. That all sounds just dandy, but it doesn't work in reality. I tried going from the boating news group to the political group to talk politics, and a boating topic broke out. I left my football group and went the flame group to do some flaming and a football discussion broke out. Even the dang political and flaming groups stray off topic. Personally, I think it's all Bush's fault. I don't expect that every newsgroup is going to remain 100% on topic, but when 80-90% of the group consist of off topic posts, to the point where some of the participants in those threads are essentially just calling each other names and creating new thread solely for that purpose it's getting a bit out of hand. That's the whole point of creating topically based groups. Stop blaming others for your own lack of willpower. It fairly easy to skip posts that aren't relevant. Again, I'm not reading the off topic posts. I still have to read the subject line for the thread to know if they're off topic and then mark them as read. It's much easier to skip posts that are not relevant if they're posted in a group that I haven't subscribed to. I've been reading this group for about 7 years and this is the worse case of off-topic article posting I've ever seen. I've been participating on usenet for 20 years and the number of off-topic article to on topic articles is just about the highest ratio I've seen as well. Get used to it because it's not going to go away. Society changes, even use net society. Those that continue to post the off topic articles are just flat out rude. Off topic is now the norm. You may consider it rude, but it is now the norm. At least in this newsgroup, off topic is not the norm, which is one of the reasons that I have continued to read it for 7 years. Hi John: this is a post i wrote but did not send (RWBNS) in response to an earlier one in this thread from you, but it seems to fit in here, in support of what you are saying. "John Fereira" wrote in message Those that continue to post the off topic articles are just flat out rude. Rudeness is hard to define, and according to some, thats a useless exercise. Although there are not FORMAL usenet rules, the thing I always liked about rbp in the past, the most recent calm period nonwithstanding, is the informal set of rules that had evolved and the cameraderie that evolved. And in that vein, I would define 'rude' as being contrary to that spirit. RBP is not a real-world space, and most folks here have not met IRL, but nontheless the longtimers had some intense shared experiences. The death of Scott, the invasion of Burntballs, the invasion of Sponsonboy.... and throughout it all we still posted friendly posts about river running, adventuring and a lot of folks managed to get together in the real world at times and share a paddle and/or a beer. We maintained our identity, folks had differing roles here and contributed accordingly, and visitors who dropped in either found it homey and welcoming and stayed, or found it too small-towny, too inbred, and left. In a lot of ways, rbp has been like a little-known special river, one that the locals know about, took care of, and although there is no organized effort to keep it secret, we all appreciated that it hadn't been discovered by the world at large. Sure, a lot of rbp-ers went over to Boatertalk and some other forums, but it wasn't the same, I hear. I seriously doubt if the denizens of those groups ever made 'BoaterTalk' t-shirts or stickers like we did here. There was something up close and family about this place, and the inside joke of the 'clique' was just one way of recognizing those who were part of the family and got the joke. A family, I might add, that was completely open to anyone who wanted to join, as long as they wanted to JOIN and not CONQUER, recognized the aura of the place and contributed to it rather than tried to redefine it. However, recently it seems like we've been discovered by some folks who would rather conquer, to redefine according to their own wants, and the effect is not unlike watching a big commercial river running outfit set up shop on that favorite little-known river. They have their lawyers, running legal defense and offense, cutting off protestations and insisting on equal access. They have their belligerant outfitters, used to being able to get their own way and well-able to bulldoze the put-in beach and pour a cement slab, changing the aura of the place forever to their own liking. And they have their dozens of innocent clients, helping to destroy that same private little river by their tacit participation with the outfitter, with no idea of what had been before. They have their experts at all aspects except the most important one; the ability to sit on the sidelines, watch the interactions, and get a feel for the aura before joining in to contribute. Oh, they're not doing anything wrong in the legal sense, but it sure feels wrong watching it all go away. Somehow, I don't think rbp will really recover from this last invasion. There are some players out there with a whole new set of rules...rules that are legal and legitimate, just rude and insensitive to what rbp was when it was a nicer place, and they aren't going to go away, and they don't care. By the time the dust settles, there will be dozens of new posters with legitimate definitions as 'locals', and the changes will be here to stay. Thats how it goes, and we all know that it doesn't always get better. I don't think I'll be posting too many 'back in the day' trip reports, as the handful of people that I had a personal connection to seem to be lost in the mob these days. Hopefully it will change, but I don't see it coming. Its just become too rude. --riverman |
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