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The Battle for Usenet
by Charles A. Gimon
Charles A. Gimon teaches an Intro to the PC Class at the English Learning Center in
South Minneapolis.
The whole world reads Usenet. Or at least, there are people in every
corner of the world who read it. From Jakarta to Johannesburg to Jacksonville, Florida,
international discussions cover just about any topic, technical or trite.
The remarkable thing about Usenet is that the workings behind the
grand discussion rely on text. A Usenet news server organizes a vast river of text into
files and directories, usually on a system running unix. Each article has headers that
govern where it's filed, where it's sent, whether it's kept, and for how long. These
headers are simple lines of text that are read by the news software. And because these
headers are text, Usenet news can be shared between almost any sort of computer using just
about any operating system.
The problem with text is that anyone can dink around with it. You
don't need access to a compiler; for that matter, you don't really need any programming
knowledge at all. Text can be searched using simple tools that are packaged with unix.
Getting Usenet to do what you want may be as simple as typing in a bogus header on a
message.
Of course, the human factor can be manipulated as well as text. Your
message can bounce its way around the world, and if you're lucky it might be read by
thousands of users. In Usenet, you can try to extend your reach by technology, or by
psychology, or like some of Usenet's more infamous personalities over the years, you can
use both. READ
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