Google Owns Your UseNet Post 174
michaelmalak writes: "Google Groups, the deja.com replacement, now supports posting of articles. But be careful, because in posting you grant Google a "royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive license." I noticed that UseNet volumes went down significantly when Remarq and then Deja went down. Then volumes went down again in the traditional slowing accompanied by college summer recess. If volume is to pick up, it will likely come from those using Google's posting service, rather than an unreliable or unavailable (esp. in the case of AOL) ISP news server. So it would seem UseNet is not going to die, it just got bought out like everything else these days."
The paragraph reads in full:
"By posting communications on or through the Service, you automatically grant Google a royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive license to use, reproduce, modify, publish, edit, translate, distribute, perform, and display the communication alone or as part of other works in any form, media, or technology whether now known or hereafter developed, and to sublicense such rights through multiple tiers of sublicensees."
Individuals also have the right to nuke their own posts, though, and to specify 'X-No-archive: yes.'
Re:"NONE EXCLUSIVE" makes this OK. [Re:And why not (Score:1)
Linux is ILLEGAL (Score:1)
no joke!
what about the old my-deja accounts!! (Score:1)
Usenet is going to die off! (Score:1)
--
Forget Napster. Why not really break the law?
There is no copyright. You posted to public forum! (Score:1)
Not quite. ANYONE can do anything with the post. Not just the "copyright holder". Why is that in quotes? Because there is no copyright on USENET posts!
It's the nature of the beast. When you voluntarily post to a PUBLIC forum, you are then and there decreeing your words to be in the public domain, yes? Thus, copyright no longer applies. And neither does "default" copyright apply because you physically placed your words into a PUBLIC forum. You knew what you were doing. You clearly chose to relinquish eternally all copyright to your article.
Wanna stay copyrighted and propietary? Post your words on your own web page and put a link in the newsgroup. Note that the link will be public domain, so don't whine about "deep linking" violations. Of course few to none may read your words then. Want a wide audience? Pay the price. Give up the (C). And welcome to real life.
Re:UseNet is supposed to be distributed (Score:1)
-1 Flamebait (Score:1)
Why can't the readers rate the lead article postings the same as the follow-ups?
In the meantime, is /. going through some sort of cash-crunch, gotta up those pageviews? It's almost as bad as when PC Mag's Fred Langa bashes Linux just to get some action going.
Re:-1 Flamebait (Score:1)
Re:Sorry, but that's just silly... (Score:1)
Take a look at http://groups.google.com/googlegroups/basics.html [google.com]
Re:Alternate Licenses? (Score:1)
Deja vu indeed, Formel objection sent to Google. (Score:1)
I've already gone through this with Deja. Guess
I will start again with Google.
You're reading the wrong NGs (Score:1)
Re:Who owns Slashdot posts?? (Score:1)
Re:Sorry, but that's just silly... (Score:1)
Furthermore, there's thousands of groups which get 0 traffic (.bork.bork groups which got a 5 second laugh from someone in 1993 and the like are still there!) and there's apparently no cabal going around and voting those groups out of existance. From the harried ISP SA point-of-view, the entire thing must seem decrepit and unmanaged.
Maybe the easy solution for the binaries problem is to just press the Off button on the news server, but hopefully they'll have more insight than that. Binary distribution via news can work, but only if it's limited to a very small number of servers with large interconnects. Unfortunately, huge ISPs such as @home don't want to make a special case of binary news, probably because it would draw attention to the fact that almost everything there is illegal.
--
usenet backups/archives (Score:1)
Wouldn't it really frost Google if a distributed usenet archive were to rise from the ashes?
I have some massive Hardware and Diskspace just sitting around gathering dust now that the internet bubble has burst. Anyone care to make some archived posting donations?
Re:UseNet is supposed to be distributed (Score:1)
If you don't want Google to be the only one doing this, why don't you create your own archive? They're the ones spending the bucks for it, and obviously other companies didn't find it financially worth the effort. Just be happy that there's a company doing this instead of raising all these paranoid issues about them. They're not some fucking charity for you to leech off of, and if there's no way for them to make money off of it, they might as well shut the whole damn thing down. And the minute they did, I bet you would be here bitching about the lack of any good usenet archives. I'm really not trying to offend you, but this whole story is one of the more ridiculous ones that Slashdot has posted lately, and that's freakin' saying something.
Cheers,
Re:Alternate Licenses? (Score:1)
Why don't you just use the X-No-Arvhive header instead of messing around with all that bullshit you just wrote?
Cheers,
Re:distributed usenet archive project? (Score:1)
I think Google uses about 3600 servers, maybe 4000. Good luck.
Cheers,
Re:distributed usenet archive project? (Score:1)
Yep, I think you're right. Thinking about it some more, I believe they recently bought 3600 systems, which was supposedly a doubling of how many they already had. Thanks.
Cheers,
Re:But newsgroup charter sez "posts are pub domain (Score:1)
Contracts are made in many ways, sometimes by custom. Custom, by the way, would be something like unjust enrichment: You watch a housepainter paint your house by mistake, never saying a word for the three days that he comes and works. When he presents the bill, you tell him about his mistake and refuse to pay. He could take you to court and win.
First, though, your stuff doesn't become public domain unless you explicitly make it so. Google only claims a non-exclusive license, which is a sort of IP "default" in the absence of explicit agreements.
All of the necessary elements for a contract arguably are there. There certainly are multiple parties. In the case of posting through Google, it's Google. Consideration comes in the form of being allowed to post to the newsgroup and having your posting accepted -- even if its fully automatic. Somebody is running those servers.
By posting something, you agree by implication, to make your posting available to anyone who reads the newsgroup postings.
That's pretty close to the definition of a non-exclusive license to distribute your posting.
I suppose you could even try the house-painter's argument: It would be unjust if you could take advantage of all those services for free, without granting that minimal level of rights (in the form of the non-exclusive license) needed to make the service reasonable.
Re:Silly Land Grab (Score:1)
Re:UseNet is supposed to be distributed (Score:1)
Embrace and Extend? (Score:1)
Now we already have the situation where UseNet is Deja (Google) for most people. Where does Google get its news from now? How about a year from now when (hypothetically) they have the lions share of traffic? Will they resist the urge to set up policies that cement their position?
For example, giving preference to articles originating from Google or affiliated ISPs (negating the need for ISPs to maintain their own spools)?
I am concerned that we'll see a UseNet where posting outside Google affiliated channels is as good as posting to
NOTE: I am *NOT* saying that this is happening now, but I cannot see why it couldn't happen.
On a side note, can I set up a web-proxy that honours "no proxy" and claim that any Google traffic passing through it is using my faciltiies to improve their customer's enjoyment of the service, and therefore I get a non exclusive licence to Google/usenet too?
Xix.
Re:And why not (Score:1)
So if you post the DeCSS code via Google, whom do the laywers target? If not Google, what if we _all_ posted it using Google?
--
Work around (Score:1)
Re:Republican Plot! (Score:1)
Of course it's a plot to make all our pr0n belong to the $epublicans! Why else would English professors be obsessing about phallic symbols and bathroom tile? :)
Copyright Myths (Score:1)
Ontopic site worth a look.
10 Big Myths about copyright explained [templetons.com]
you don't get it (Score:1)
it seems to me that google is doing the minimum possible to make sure that they have the right to publish your post. what's wrong with that?
nobody
Re:The real reason why USENET is fading away: (Score:1)
Re:UseNet is supposed to be distributed (Score:1)
If we become people who are that clueless then we will deserve to have Usenet be "controlled" by some one company.
Re:Incorrect Story Title (Score:2)
Still, this is not nearly as problematic as them actually *owning* your posts would've been. If Google had claimed ownership, that brings up a host of bad situations, such as you having to obtain Google's permission if you wanted to release a book containing your posts (which would now be posts owned by Google).
Yes. PUBLIC newsgroups and PUBLIC television. (Score:2)
I suspect the radio and television networks would disagree with you here...
Only the private broadcasters. Giving up copyright has nothing to do with the medium being a boradcast one. I never said that. It all comes down to the charter of the forum you are posting in.
The newsgroups were CREATED AS PUBLIC FORUMS. Accepting this is a precondition of participating.
Fox was created as a PRIVATE BROADCASTER.
When the newspaper editorial section states that "all your submission are belong to us" and you write something to them, you have no copyright protection because you knew you were waiving them before you sent them in. Ditto your words on RADIO AND TV call-in programs.
Ditto USENET.
It's the same thing.
Isn't that why you posted? (Score:2)
If Google wasn't allowed to publish (etc) your posts, they couldn't propagate your posts. In fact, Google does most of those things to posts made through other news servers, too, since they reformat them in HTML and serve them to Google users.
Re:UseNet is supposed to be distributed (Score:2)
And thank god for that! The signal-to-noise ratio on usenet *immediately* skyrocketed.
There would be nothing better than to get rid of web interfaces to Usenet. It allows dumb people to get access. There was a time, oh so very long ago, when Usenet was a high-quality information exchange media: there were interesting, informative discussions where most everyone knew what s/he was talking about. These days, it's about as intelligent as a Lowtax ICQ prank...
--
Re:UseNet is supposed to be distributed (Score:2)
Yes, that's elitist. Tough.
--
Re:You immoral sub-human (Score:2)
Read his message more carefully, and you'll understand exactly why he should have added similar terms of service.
Today's world may be way too obsessive about terms of service and the like, and there are about a billion clauses that are most likely too extreme to pass through a court. Sadly, that doesn't mean at least basic terms are not necessary. There are, after all, about a billion lawyers out there, and settling a dispute is extraordinarily expensive.
D
----
Re:The problem (Score:2)
If that's not so, then the whole world tilts on its axis and USENET archives cannot exist anymore. Surely this is a bad thing?
D
----
Re:Sorry, but that's just silly... (Score:2)
Now, nobody's on Usenet execept the people who know about Usenet. Not even the spammers are on usenet anymore (well, maybe in the porn groups still). J.Random AOL doesn't even know what Google is, much less groups.google.com.
I dunno. Maybe you are just reading different groups than me. Usenet seems in the best shape in ages - the endless september seems to have ended.
--
Give me a break.. (Score:2)
Next thing you know, people will want money for my repeating the jokes they tell at parties...
Another Troll Story (Score:2)
This story - Google now owns your post - in actuality no such thing - Google actually is only taking a license to use your post, and the recent story on the TIVO patents both grossly distort the true situation.
The major misrepresentations seems to consistently involve intellectual property issues, which we know that editors have a strong bias against.
It is time for the Slashdot editorial staff to wake up and present their readership with a more factual repesentation of these issues. They are not serving their readership or their cause with these stories.
Google don't own your usenet posts (Score:2)
Re:UseNet is supposed to be distributed (Score:2)
Whenever someone asks Google to see a message, Google must redistribute the message . In order to do this legally, they must have license to redistribute it, copy it, etc. The easiest way to do this is to put it in their TOS that this license is implicitly granted. It absolutely boggles me how people expect others to honour their copyright on original works one day, then turn around and demand that they break copyright later.
Why are we always whining? (Score:2)
It was not so long ago that we were ridiculing authors of postings for asserting their copyright in public postings; and ridiculing participants in disputes for suing one another for defamation. First amendment uber alles, we said.
All Google seems to be demanding here is the utterly reasonable proposition that, if you use their systems, you can't sue them for using the fruits of that use. True, you can't post there and then keep them from incorporating your posts in a book. Your solution? Don't post there.
Why is that unreasonable?
Seriously, it seems like we are taking highly inconsistent positions these days, depending more upon whose ok is gored than upon the merits or principles at hand.
Re:The real reason why USENET is fading away: (Score:2)
I regularly read comp.graphics.rendering.renderman, and while there are people posting "I am wondering how I can make toy story graphics with renderman?", there are still interesting discussion about antialiasing, algorithmic considerations and various RIB exporters.
And Larry Gritz posts regularly. That's good enough for me.
-grendel drago
Re:Claranews or others? (Score:2)
Supernews [supernews.com] is pretty decent, too. It's a bit more expensive now than when I last subscribed to it (used to be $10/month), but my cable-modem service provider [lvcm.com] outsources Usenet to Supernews so it's part of what I pay for that.
Um... (Score:2)
Re:Sorry, but that's just silly... (Score:2)
While it's better than it was in 1998-9, I wouldn't go that far... A full feed now saturates an OC-3 (~260G/d), and the types of cluelessness now exhibited is the type that hurts.
Current record-holder: Someone who posted 1.8G of MP3s in a single day through his brand-new cablemodem. "75M/d recommended posting limit in absmp3? What limit? They can't possibly mean me! I've got a cablemodem! I'm cooler than that!"
The scary bit is that this guy was a drop in the bucket - there are groups where 600M DivX'd movies and ISO images are thrown around with regularity.
Meanwhile, transit servers continue to drop articles on the floor as the load escalates. Bad enough to try and justify to the Board of Directors why you need another terabyte of storage, but another OC-3? :-)
Yeah, USENET was never designed for large binaries , but if the binaries cause ISPs to drop all USENET support, the text groups may go with 'em. Google's archives aren't much use without a backbone of transit servers to propagate the articles. If Google becomes the only way to access USENET, the distinction between USENET and any other "message board" web site goes away.
Re:One thing I like about this. (Score:2)
Mail-to-News gateway. St00pidly-adminned Sendmail 8.6 box (just read your spam to find 'em!) or a cypherpunk chain of anonymous remailers. Library or university.
Re:Usenet volume down? (Score:2)
Well, under DMCA, if RIAA mails you (if you're a US ISP) and tells you that Message-ID: $FOO1 .. FOO45 represent parts 1-45 of a copyright violation, you still have to delete it or issue (forged) cancels.
Of course, no other USENET server has to accept the cancels. And it's likely that by the time you received the DMCA complaint, the articles will have expired anyways :)
More interestingly - absmp3.beatles isn't carried at my ISP. Rationale - the Beatles don't want their work posted on USENET. This newsgroup charter implies that the content of the group would exclusively consist of copyright violations. So my ISP (wisely, IMHO) chooses not to carry the group. But absmp3 has no such charter. Could be indie groups posting their own work. Could be the Grateful Dead, who don't mind sharing. Could also be a lot of copyrighted stuff too. But because absmp3 is "all of the above", my ISP chooses to carry it, because it's not clear that every post is intended to be a copyright violation. (It's just a lucky coincidence ;-)
Anyways, RIAA hasn't left USENET alone. They're no doubt logging NNTP-Posting-Host: headers and keeping track of who the largest posters are, and sending mails to various ISPs asking them to either nuke the poster or fork over the info for a lawsuit. Nuking the poster for TOS violation is probably cheaper (one mail to abuse@), and has much less negative PR impact (than a lawsuit), so that's probably the way they're going.
Thankfully, just as reading USENET is like drinking from a fire hose, so's suing MP3 posters off of USENET. At least for the time being. I'm amazed it's lasted as long as it has with the increase in the size of a full feed. What the hell, at least I can say I was there during the Golden Age, survived Endless September, and still managed to get enough out-of-print music out of it during the "My God, It's Still Alive!" stage to last me a lifetime.
(Actually, that may be the other reason RIAA has left USENET alone - RIAA makes most of its CD sales revenue off the latest teenybopper band single, not the back-catalogue. Napster's loaded with top-40. USENET's the exact opposite - the top 40's there, but the balance has shifted to favor the rare/obscure/OOP stuff. Much more interesting mix of stuff, IMHO.
take two (Score:2)
Didn't slashdot touch off on this a few months back http://slashdot.org/articles/01/02/22/0124253.sht
So I see this solely as something of a warning to companies who may think of making money of some sort in the future nothing more. Aside from worthless jokes, cheesy porn, and millions of 31337 hax0r3r posts 98% of which make no sense, I've found Usenet useless 95% of the times, and have found better private mailing lists for my needs, so I see no big deal with this news.
Murder, Genocide, MKUltra, and stolen Uranium [antioffline.com]
Usenet Posts, IMO, are in the public domain... (Score:2)
Anyway, if you have the arrogance to think your post is important enough to be valuable and you can't find your own news server to post to (including the other free servers like newsone.net) you probably shouldn't be posting to usenet anyway....
-Moondogy
Re:And why not (Score:2)
There are plenty of other services that allow you to post to usenet without licensing your text to them (ie. most Internet Service Providers). Google shouldn't be kicked in the face for not being the company you - or anybody else - (probably) thought it was or expected it to be.
Currently, it appears that Google has no formal business plans to financially exploit what its users write. This contract/license just happens to give Google the legal wedge should they find a way to do this. There's nothing that obligates you to agree to the contract -- just don't use their service.
Microsoft, on the other hand, has nothing in its Windows licences specifying that you must agree to licence work created for the Operating System (OS) to Microsoft. If they did, it would be awfully foolish, given their previous Anti-trust difficulties -- let's not also forget that it is the software authors who help Microsoft keep many of their users. Although, Microsoft may own some system and dll files your app may need - including the OS, itself - it owns no more of your app than, say, the authors of GTK do (if your app makes use of the GTK).
Re:license != owning (Score:2)
Relevant post [slashdot.org]
If you use their service to post to Usenet, you ARE agreeing to their contract, and are obligated to follow it.
I suspect that this clause of their contract is the exchange of "property" required for any contract to be considered legally binding. You receive their service in exchange for licensing them your posts. This would validate other parts of the contract, as well, in the eyes of the law.
Re:One thing I like about this. (Score:2)
All Your Base Are Belong To Us!!!
The problem (Score:2)
Suppose I am Stephen King. Suppose I'm writing my next bestseller, and I decide to post it, part by part, on the usenet. Using google.
What this means is that google can now take my story, and resell it, denying me my rightful royalties. As a result, my family and I now starve to death.
Re:Sorry, but that's just silly... (Score:2)
Imagine if every newsgroup could create a quiz (authentication of who represents a newsgroup left to imaginiation) and lodge that quiz with lamebraingate, henceforth Google. Now when Joe Lamer wants to post his javascript question to comp.lang.perl.misc, Google would ask him three questions about the charter of clpm. When he answers them wrong, Google would show him the group faq and pointers to other newsgroups based on the words in his proposed post.
Also, newsgroups could enforce forms for certain types of newbie questions. Using clpm as an example again, It would be great if every querent had to answer:
Re:They're just covering their ass... (Score:2)
All your hellmouth post are belong to JonKatz [optushome.com.au].
Yeah. (Score:2)
Re:One thing I like about this. (Score:2)
Re:Silly Land Grab (Score:2)
--------------------------------------
Using the DMCA against Google (Score:2)
Correction: Do copyrights run out anymore? (Score:2)
Work does not go into the public domain unless (1) the content wasn't copyrightable in the first place, (2) the copyright runs out
Do copyrights even run out anymore? I thought Congress and Disney Co. had a deal [pineight.com]: every 20 years, Congress retroactively adds 20 years to all copyrights.
Rock and a Hard Place (Score:2)
Oh for god's sake (Score:2)
Re:Only Usenet? (Score:2)
sheesh...
Re:Someone should give some background (Score:2)
That should answer your question.
TTYL + HAND!
Oh no! Whatever will we do! (Score:2)
--
Usenet volume down? (Score:2)
Do these volumes include binaries? Working for an ISP that handles 90gig of new volume a day, I'm more than a little surprised.... The biggest attraction for usenet now are the binaries posts it seems, 90Gig isn't just students posting Linux support questions. Also, as we're on news server issues, why has the RIAA etal left news alone? I guess because it's de-centralized?
Seriously where do the news service providors stand legally, they own the servers and people download copied software / music off those servers. I realise the articles don't orginate from a single news providor and I guess news providor's are counted legally the same way as telephone companies, but if 2600 can be found guilty of something for just linking how long before this changes. I recall a case in the UK where a news providor was found guily of libel for just carring an article, how much safe ground does usenet have against the MPAA & the RIAA?
IS this that bad when it's in English (Score:2)
By posting communications on or through the Service, you automatically grant Google a:
Royalty-free = You're posting it on usenet, if you wanted royalities in the first place this isn't such a good idea.
Perpetual = Its on going, they don't have to renew this "license".
irrevocable = You can't take this license away from google, of course there going to put this in there.
non-exclusive = You can license what you post to third parties regardless of google's license.
reproduce = As soon google's news server distributes it to it's news peers, it's reproduced.
modify = One of the same freedoms the GPL grants.
publish = In essence when someone does a search on google and your post is returned, they are publishing it and again if you didn't want people to see it why post it?
edit = Correct your spelling.
translate = Provide an additional service so the article you posted can be seen and possible help more people.
distribute = Send to other news peers.
perform = If you post guitar tab / a play for people to perform, why can't google do the same?
All of the above are things would would expect to happen if you posted information to usenet, I think Google are just ass covering a bit here. Maybe it's to stop newbies complaining that don't understand usenet. For people that post to news and understand it, you generally know what you post is for the world to do with as they please.
Furthermore, you still retain the copyright to whatever you post, so they don't "own" it, you've just given them a license to use it as they please. The only problem I could see is that Google could license your post to third parties without your consent but really if you had get rich plans by licensing something would you really post it for the world to see for free? Is this such a small price to pay for a good free service and guess what, if you don't like the license, don't use the service.
Alternate Licenses? (Score:2)
Each post made outside of Google should have a signature file specifically prohibiting use by Google, specifying costs to be assessed for licensing by google, etc. (say $500 per incident) and in general prohibiting any "license to use, reproduce, modify, publish, edit, translate, distribute, perform, and display the communication alone or as part of other works in any form, media, or technology whether now known or hereafter developed", and prohibiting any effort to "sublicense such rights through multiple tiers of sublicensees" without prior agreement of the original poster or their heirs.
Check out the Vinny the Vampire [eplugz.com] comic strip
Silly Land Grab (Score:2)
Now, Ive never used Deja - so it may be more than a interface to the NNTP network that I am accustomed to using w/ PAN and whatnot*.
How does Google possibly need to make this AYB-Style Land Grab when it wont do them any good because the rest of us can go on posting our aol-suckzors libel-insipiring posts from elsewhere && google serves them up to their users JUST AS IF THEY HAD BEEN POSTED via DejaGoogle....
This dosnt make sense*. Google dosnt appear to gain much by doing this - except a shitload of pissed off users wondering how the heck they get off making demands of the users who are supposed to be 'customers.'
*Is Deja not simply a NNTP client?
Re:Another Troll Story (Score:2)
Harrumph.
Re:But newsgroup charter sez "posts are pub domain (Score:2)
It's not a contract unless I sign it and/or otherwise agree to it.
--
uuhhh.... (Score:2)
Just playing it safe when anybody will suee anybody for any reason whatsoever....
Re:So what it really means is.. (Score:2)
Google is protecting their backside. If they don't ask for a non-exclusive right when you post through this service, there is a potential for a lawsuit later if they create archives or do other things with that material. If I were in their shoes, I'd ask for a non-exclusive license, too, in order to continue be able to post.
Slashdot has at least an implicit (if not explicit) non-exclusive right to your words when you post here.
When I ran an early Internet marketing mailing list from 1994 to 1996 (www.i-m.com), I foolishly didn't initially make a condition of posting, and this, in turn, led users later to threaten me with lawsuits if I produced any for-profit or for-free versions of the list outside the archive. I eventually shut down the list, as I had better things to do than hire lawyers and sort out copyright issues.
Only Usenet? (Score:2)
"NONE EXCLUSIVE" makes this OK. [Re:And why not] (Score:3)
The key term to look for in there is "none exclusive".
That term essentially means you still own your post and you can sell or give it to anyone else as you see fit. It also says that if someone else builds a competitive service we can't challenge them on the notion that your posts belong to us because the license grant is NONE EXCLUSIVE.
In short Google is not behaving badly and have simply written up the bare minimum document needed to save their asses.
One thing I like about this. (Score:3)
So, by using anonymizer.com or something similar to log into google groups and then using google to post to a newsgroup, you have a much better chance of remaining anonymous.
Re:The real reason why USENET is fading away: (Score:3)
To keep things going, you either need a steady supply of news (which is how
--
The license (Score:3)
They are (it looks like) simply covering their ass, so if they one day build a new database they don't get SUED by some yahoo who says 'you don't have the right to do that'.
They are saying that if you post through them, then they can do what they want with the posting, basically. Yes, it cuold have some negative ramifications.. but then, I doubt peopel would be posting sensitive IP to usenet anyway.
Regardless of 'posters rights' I think it's silly to post something to a public, global, uncontrolled and uncentralized forum like usenet and expect to have any sort of control, legal or otherwise, over what happens to the data you posted.
Re:Silly Land Grab (Score:3)
Nothing to see here folks. Move along.
--
Get a better news reader... (Score:3)
The 'cluedness' of the average USENET poster has gone down the tubes. Sure, it's always been a great place for newbies to get some help from the veterans, but lately things have gotten out of control. Cross-posting is rampant, trolls are everywhere, and spammers think folks care about their offerings.
Then get a better newsreader. I see hardly any spam, annoying posters never hit my radar, and posts from people whose expertise I value reading are moved up the lists so I read the threads they have posted to first. You need a scoring newsreader rather than a kill-filing one for really good post sorting - Gnus is my preference.
Technical discussion has given away to politics.
Blind assertion does not equal fact. Various newsgroups see their readership change over time. In almost any group, you can start to answer all the newbie questions after six months, simply by being exposed to all the responses. Politics does occur on the newsgroups, but so does technical discussion. If a group no longer serves your needs, find a better/different one.
Less than 18 months ago comp.sys.sgi.* was full of interesting chatter, these days half of the posts are by folks asking how to install a (completely unaccelerated and very unfinished) Linux port on an SGI MIPS machine they bought off eBay for $50.
So? You obviously don't value these posts, which is probably fair enough. For a new (or nearly new...) SGI owner, asking about difficulties with a Linux port is a reasonable question. If the answer is "Read the FAQ", then educate the new users. Thats a part of the UseNet community.
The true engineers, developers, and scientific users have pulled completely out and rely on private mailing lists.
Hmm. Staring at the poster lists, I'd say your claim was pretty far from reality. There seems to be a reasonable clue-to-noise ratio rattling around the sgi groups.
Some people will give up on Usenet, often because local resources to them give more select information. I've knocked around on Usenet for about the last 8 years or so, and I don't really see any great signs of changes in clue-level on the newsgroup levels. (except on alt.fan.pratchett, which went from a fun place to hang out to a disaster area simply because of a massive increase in posting levels making it difficult to keep up with or maintain any solid contact with. The price of success..) There are more people now who are playing with Linux and making their first steps with an unfamiliar OS than I remember being the case four years ago, but that is hardly surprising. Don't get frustrated at new users for asking questions you already know the answers to - either help them or offer new sections to be added to the newsgroup FAQ. New users have always been a part of the UseNet postings - getting them clued up is part of the UseNet tradition.
Cheers,
Toby Haynes
Modify = Attach Ads to (Score:3)
Re:They're just covering their ass... (Score:3)
Yeah, that only happens on little pissant sites like Slashdot. *cough*JonKatz*cough*
--
You can't even reply to a google post (Score:3)
However, then they continue to say you can't reproduce or distribute the "Materials" for public purpose without the written permission of Google.
This means you can't reply to a post if you include anything from the post you are replying to.
I wonder if it also applies if you are not replying to a Google post through Google, but with your own news-agent...
I would have included the relevant part from the posting terms page, but I am afraid to, because I havent't got their written permission.
Republican Plot! (Score:3)
Incorrect Story Title (Score:4)
All your Usenet posts are belong to Google! (Score:4)
I'm confused (Score:4)
I thought Google were the good guys, because they used a Linux server farm. Now it turns out that they're acting like a business, which makes them the bad guys, right? Can one of the mages at Slashdot please tell me what the orthodox line is on Google? Still clean? Or worse than Microsoft?
And are there any incensed iconoclasts out there pledging to create an Open Source, GPL'd search engine and news directory?
license != owning (Score:5)
That google demands a license in order to post using their service may be unfortunate, but it isn't really suprising given the state of Intellectual Property law in the world today. Without the license, they would be subject to unreasonable liability.
And yes, what about posts made elsewhere that end up on Google groups. I really have no idea. Maybe Google will claim that they assumed the post was redistributatble given the nature of usenet an assumption they couldn't necessarily reasoably make for a posting made through their own service.
Comment removed (Score:5)
Re:Am I paranoid? (Score:5)
The CIA has invested $1 Million in Safeweb, and uses it for its own agents (and I believe they use triangleboy [triangleboy.com] when in the field.
So, if they trust it, then why shouldn't you... Of course, if they have a stake, whose to say they don't have a bit of insider access...
"The issue is not whether you are paranoid, the issue is whether you are paranoid enough."
- Max, "Strange Days"
Contrary to the rumors of Usenet's death... (Score:5)
Usenet did fine before deja.com, it'll do fine after google.com is gone.
Somehow, I don't think it's a problem that some ISPs don't allow newsgroup access.
As long as you can find people like Dennis Ritchie [google.com],John R. Mashey [google.com](actually, he seems to have abandoned Usenet in January, but his Farewell is there...),John McCarthy [google.com],Bjarne Stroustroup [google.com] and Larry Wall [google.com] posting frequently, I'll keep reading.
Somehow, it doesn't bother me much that what passes for common wisdom here is that Usenet is effectively already dead. I don't read much about sporks or petrified women on Usenet.
UseNet is supposed to be distributed (Score:5)
The problem comes in only if the prediction I made comes true: that Google Groups grows to become the primary way for people to post to UseNet due to continuing decay of ISP support for UseNet. UseNet is supposed to be distributed, not centralized in a corporation. We have seen the effects of this already. Frequent posters who relied on deja.com were suddenly silenced.
And now that Google can take posted articles out of context and publish them without attribution -- and if Google becomes the dominant UseNet entryway in the same way Windows is the dominant OS -- then it puts a chill, or at least a corporatized spin, on UseNet.
So, yes, there are alternatives to Google Groups today, but tomorrow UseNet may be nearly fully controlled by and dependent upon a single company.
The real reason why USENET is fading away: (Score:5)
Google didn't kill USENET, lamers did.
Re:There is no copyright. You posted to public for (Score:5)
...And welcome to real life.
Welcome to the way the law actually works.They're just covering their ass... (Score:5)
Usenet posts are a fairly grey area when it comes to copyright law... Google's just being safe. Now, they could be planning to take all the Star Trek porn fanfic that's being posted through their interface and make millions selling it in their own compilation, but I think that's unlikely...
--
Convictions are more dangerous enemies of truth than lies.
Re:UseNet is supposed to be distributed (Score:5)
And now that Google can take posted articles out of context and publish them without attribution -- and if Google becomes the dominant UseNet entryway in the same way Windows is the dominant OS -- then it puts a chill, or at least a corporatized spin, on UseNet.
Where does it say it can publish them without attribution? The copyright doesn't change hands, and even under license, the copyright holder must be credited.
The clause in question only means that Google has automatic permission to re-use the post without having to ask the copyright holder, not claim ownership of it.
So what it really means is.. (Score:5)
From the clause, I can see no change of copyright or any other IP, but Google is granted non-exclusive rights to the post. (Non-exclusive meaning the copyright holder can still do whatever he likes with it, even sell it on).
What exactly is the problem here?
I feel I am qualified to make this judgement. (Score:5)
You know, like George Lucas or Sony. So we should all continue supporting them individually while loudly proclaiming collectively that nobody should support them.
--