The neat thing about Usenet is that as a server admin you can just
*create* groups at will, in arbitrary hierarchies, and if your peers
think it's a good idea, they'll carry them too.
John <john@building-m.simplistic-anti-spam-measure.net> writes:
The neat thing about Usenet is that as a server admin you can justWould these groups be public or would they be only be visible to the server?
*create* groups at will, in arbitrary hierarchies, and if your peers
think it's a good idea, they'll carry them too.
Arbitrary hierarchies are everything outside of the Big-8?
On 6/18/23 12:02 PM, cr0c0d1le wrote:The Big-8 management board is in charge of what it says on the tin.
I have the same kinds of questions. It's unclear to me what the
relationship between Usenet in general and the Big-8 are.
And is there any way to clean up hierarchies?It depends on the hierarchy, not every one is managed by the same
["Followup-To:" header set to alt.fan.usenet.]
On 2023-06-18, a cat <a_cat@example.com> wrote:
On 6/18/23 12:02 PM, cr0c0d1le wrote:The Big-8 management board is in charge of what it says on the tin.
I have the same kinds of questions. It's unclear to me what the
relationship between Usenet in general and the Big-8 are.
Managing the 8 big hierarchies: comp.*, humanities.*, misc.*, news.*,
rec.*, sci.*, soc.* and talk.*. They, among other things, create new newsgroups, delete existing ones (assuming a good reason is provided)
and add/remove people from overseeing moderated groups. It is of course
still up to the individual newsserver administrators of what newsgroups
they want/do not want to carry. Usenet is the network of servers as a
whole, the same one you're using to read this.
And is there any way to clean up hierarchies?It depends on the hierarchy, not every one is managed by the same
people, requests about alt.* should be directed to alt.config but do
keep in mind, there is no central entity that manages alt.*.
Am 18.06.2023 um 14:30:20 Uhr schrieb John:
Where can I read them?
The "tildeverse" has tilde.* groups, which don't have a lot of traffic
but it's an attempt and I salute the intention.
Indeed anyone can just go ahead and fire off a control message to
create a new alt newsgroup, but there's no guarantee any other server
will actually respect it or keep the group around...
I have the same kinds of questions. It's unclear to me what the
relationship between Usenet in general and the Big-8 are.
Why is so much under alt?
And is there any way to clean up hierarchies? I see a lot of duplicates
and it makes it unclear where to post (aside from "go where the people
are"). And some of the hierarchies that aren't used make more sense to
me than the ones that are, e.g. alt.startrek is active, but
alt.tv.star-trek isn't. And why isn't it rec.tv.star-trek?
The neat thing about Usenet is that as a server admin you can just
*create* groups at will, in arbitrary hierarchies, and if your peers
think it's a good idea, they'll carry them too.
Usenet II was a good idea in my opinion (I find their "sound site" rules
a lot simpler than I expected) but it never went anywhere; I assume the
net.* hierarchy is now fully defunct.
The "tildeverse" has tilde.* groups, which don't have a lot of traffic
but it's an attempt and I salute the intention.
Any other interesting hierarchies that you'd consider "outside" of
Usenet proper?
john
Would these groups be public or would they be only be visible to the server?
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