Irene Waters wrote:
> wrote
>snip but suggestions read
>> The problem with dead
>> groups? We can't get rid of them (no mechanism for it)
>The Guidelines for Big 8 Newsgroup Creation, routinely posted here, say
>otherwise:
>"3. A proposal must consist of one or more of the following changes to Big
> Eight newsgroups: Create a new newsgroup, remove an existing
> newsgroup (by subsuming it into an existing group)... "
Note "by subsuming it" is not a simple removal. Proposals
of this sort have the same requirement as a creation proposal:
you have to find 110+ people willing to vote YES to removal.
And they are intented for consolidating topic spaces, not
removing them.
If a group is dead, the voters won't be coming from it. There
probably wouldn't even be a proponent for a removal proposal. They
would have to come from one of the groups willing to subsume
the topic space (and thus any relevant traffic). If the group
is created by votes from non-usenet voters, they won't be there
for the subsumption vote. Thus, in the situation under discussion,
Para.3. very likely wouldn't work. That being said, a future
proponent could take it upon themselves to try to push for a
renaming of the group into something they think will work better.
There could be a battle in that, as it takes fewer opposition
votes to sink a proposal than supporting votes.
Alternatives, none. We have an early proposal for a general
process for removing dead groups, but we simply haven't been able
to get very far towards implementing anything like it. Issues
like "what constitutes a dead group?", "what kind of vote
criteria?", and "how do we get all the ISPs on board?" require
significant consideration. And the folks who would have to
implement it, have higher priority stuff to deal with.
Oh, regarding that ISP "on board" issue, it's a problem.
Right now, ISPs are loath to honor "remove" requests due to past
super-abuses of fake remove requests. So even if Para.3.
suceeded, ISPs may not actually remove the group anyways,
which brings a different set of headaches (like folks
suggesting posting in a "non-existing" group for more info).
The way I see it, it is better to get reliable voters and
fail, than get a majority of voters that won't read the group
and pass. With the former, you know where you stand and can
try it again after working out what needs to be done.
So, you (the collective "you") should to try within reason to
do it right from the outset.
ru
--
My standard proposals rant:
Quality, usefulness, merit, or non-newsgroups popularity of a topic
is more or less irrelevant in creating a new Big-8 newsgroup.
Usenet popularity is the primary consideration.
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)
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