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What
Usenet is Not
1. Usenet is not an
organization.
No person or group has
authority over Usenet as a whole. No one controls who gets
a news feed, which articles are propagated where, who can
post articles, or anything else. There is no "Usenet
Incorporated," nor is there a "Usenet User's
Group." You're on your own.Granted, there are various
activities organized by means of Usenet newsgroups. The
newsgroup creation process is one such activity. But it
would be a mistake to equate Usenet with the organized
activities it makes possible. If they were to stop
tomorrow, Usenet would go on without them.
2. Usenet is not a
democracy.
Since there is no
person or group in charge of Usenet as a whole -- i.e.
there is no Usenet "government" -- it follows
that Usenet cannot be a democracy, autocracy, or any other
kind of "-acy." (But see "The Camel's
Nose?" below.)
3. Usenet is not fair.
After all, who shall
decide what's fair? For that matter, if someone is
behaving unfairly, who's going to stop him? Neither you
nor I, that's certain.
4. Usenet is not a
right.
Some people
misunderstand their local right of "freedom of
speech" to mean that they have a legal right to use
others' computers to say what they wish in whatever way
they wish, and the owners of said computers have no right
to stop them. Those people are wrong. Freedom of speech
also means freedom not to speak. If I choose not to use my
computer to aid your speech, that is my right. Freedom of
the press belongs to those who own one.
5. Usenet is not a
public utility.
Some Usenet sites are
publicly funded or subsidized. Most of them, by plain
count, are not. There is no government monopoly on Usenet,
and little or no government control.
6. Usenet is not an
academic network.
It is no surprise that
many Usenet sites are universities, research labs or other
academic institutions. Usenet originated with a link
between two universities, and the exchange of ideas and
information is what such institutions are all about. But
the passage of years has changed Usenet's character.
Today, by plain count, most Usenet sites are commercial
entities.
7. Usenet is not an
advertising medium.
Because of Usenet's
roots in academia, and because Usenet depends so heavily
on cooperation (sometimes among competitors), custom
dictates that advertising be kept to a minimum. It is
tolerated if it is infrequent, informative, and low-hype.
The "comp.newprod"
newsgroup is NOT an exception to this rule: product
announcements are screened by a moderator in an attempt to
keep the hype-to-information ratio in check. If you must
engage in flackery for your company, use the
"biz" hierarchy, which is explicitly
"advertising-allowed", and which (like all of
Usenet) is carried only by those sites that want it.
8. Usenet is not the
Internet.
The Internet is a
wide-ranging network, parts of which are subsidized by
various governments. It carries many kinds of traffic, of
which Usenet is only one. And the Internet is only one of
the various networks carrying Usenet traffic.
9. Usenet is not a UUCP
network.
UUCP is a protocol
(actually a "protocol suite," but that's a
technical quibble) for sending data over point-to-point
connections, typically using dialup modems. Sites use UUCP
to carry many kinds of traffic, of which Usenet is only
one. And UUCP is only one of the various transports
carrying Usenet traffic.
10. Usenet is not a
United States network.
It is true that Usenet
originated in the United States, and the fastest growth in
Usenet sites has been there. Nowadays, however, Usenet
extends worldwide. The heaviest concentrations of Usenet
sites outside the U.S. seem to be in Canada, Europe,
Australia and Japan. Keep Usenet's worldwide nature in
mind when you post articles. Even those who can read your
language may have a culture wildly different from yours.
When your words are read, they might not mean what you
think they mean.
11. Usenet is not a
UNIX network.
Don't assume that
everyone is using "rn" on a UNIX machine. Among
the systems used to read and post to Usenet are Vaxen
running VMS, IBM mainframes, Amigas, Macintoshes and
MS-DOS PCs.
12. Usenet is not an
ASCII network.
The A in ASCII
stands for "American". Sites in other countries
often use character sets better suited to their language(s)
of choice; such are typically, though not always,
supersets of ASCII. Even in the United States, ASCII is
not universally used: IBM mainframes use (shudder) EBCDIC.
Ignore non-ASCII sites if you like, but they exist.
13. Usenet is not
software.
There are dozens
of software packages used at various sites to transport
and read Usenet articles. So no one program or package can
be called "the Usenet software." Software
designed to support Usenet traffic can be (and is) used
for other kinds of communication, usually without risk of
mixing the two. Such private communication networks are
typically kept distinct from Usenet by the invention of
newsgroup names different from the universally-recognized
ones.
Taken from:
What
is Usenet FAQ.
What
is Usenet?
Glossary
of Usenet Terms
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