Soc.Religion.Unitarian-Univ Policy Guidelines
THE CHARTER OF SOC.RELIGION.UNITARIAN-UNIV
This group, soc.religion.unitarian-univ, [1] is
to serve as a forum for discussion of issues pertaining to
liberal or non-creedal religions,
particularly Unitarian Universalism.
Discussion of other religions is acceptable
insofar as it is relevant to UUism,
but keep in mind that another newsgroup
(e.g., soc.religion.christian, soc.culture.jewish, etc.)
may be more appropriate.
Acceptable topics include, but are not limited to,
discussion of UU principles and practices,
questions regarding locations of UU congregations,
organizing, running, administering, and living within UU churches,
moral/ethical/philosophical discussion in a UU context,
and comparisons of Unitarian Universalism to other religions.
SUBMISSIONS
Submissions/postings for soc.religion.unitarian-univ should be sent to:
uu@iecc.com
Administrative material and queries should be sent to:
uu-request@iecc.com
The moderators as a group can be addressed as:
uu-mods@iecc.com
Materials submitted for posting to the newsgroup are handled
by an automated system (the "mod-bot")
and are acknowledged when received.
All members must register once
to verify that they did intend to send a message to
soc.religion.unitarian-univ.
The newsgroup is subject to the conventions of network etiquette.
In practice, the automoderator software package
will strip all crossposting to other newsgroups
from the "Newsgroups:" line,
then approve and insert the received articles into the newsgroup.
All posts must come from registered members.
The moderators may, from time to time,
hand-moderate posts from some members.
Currently this is not being done.
The moderation guidelines are intended
mainly to regulate the "noise level"
of the newsgroup.
Vigorous discussion and critical examination of the issues
raised in conversation is highly encouraged.
Personal attacks and inflammatory (flaming) remarks
are not tolerated.
To these ends, here are a few "bullet points"
that give examples of the guidelines
that the moderators may apply in evaluating articles
posted by the members:
-
The "general rules of Usenet netiquette" will apply to this newsgroup.
These can be found in articles appearing in the newsgroup
news.announce.newusers
at frequent intervals.
-
Irresponsible and blatant disrespect for other members
may result in moderation, or, in extreme cases,
banning from posting to the newsgroup.
It does not matter that many or most postings are not abusive,
a continuing pattern of abuse may result in moderator action.
Abuse is not exhaustively defined - the principle
of "we know it when we see it" will be applied.
Examples of abuse might include:
-
Threats
-
Personally directed invective against other posters or their
friends, families, or associates.
-
Circumventing the moderation system.
-
Use of email to harass or abuse newsgroup members.
-
The guidelines will be applied with a liberal interpretation
in sympathy with the "Principles and Purposes" of the UUA.
-
Administrative communications,
such as comments, complaints and inquiries,
should be mailed to the moderators,
and not posted to the group.
-
Posting to the newsgroup requires a valid e-mail address.
Posting requires that the member accept e-mail from the moderators,
and e-mailed responses to posts from other group members.
-
As of Monday April 26, 1999, there is a
"moratorium"[2] on meta-discussion
in the newsgroup.[3]
Such discussion is a constant generator of complaints
to (and about) the moderators,
and most newsgroups members who have given the moderators their opinion
about such discussions have stated that they
want it to stop appearing in the newsgroup.
A new mailing list for such policy discussion is available
from the moderation site.
The sruu-policy mailing list is handled by
the majordomo[4] server at
iecc.com.
To subscribe send a message to the address:
majordomo@iecc.com
that contains a command of the form:
subscribe sruu-policy
your_email_address
end
If you would rather receive the messages as a daily digest,
substitute sruu-policy-digest into the command given.
This begins the usual mailing list subscription dialog process.
You will be asked to confirm your request for the mailing list,
and then the message will be processed and you will begin receiveing
messages from the mailing list shortly thereafter.
Additional comments about netiquette are included
below in this document.
MODERATION PROCEDURES
The moderators read all postings in the newsgroup.
When they notice unacceptable conduct by a group member
as a first step, they will send e-mail warnings.
(Failure to accept the mail,
or the discovery that an email address is not valid
will result in posting privleges being suspended
until the e-mail address works again.)
If the moderators don't seem to be on their toes,
and posters see unacceptable behavior occurring,
email may be sent to:
uu-request@iecc.com
to bring it to their attention. This address sends to all the moderators.
Stage two moderation,
when posters fail to voluntarily behave themselves
in response to e-mail from the moderators,
consists of fixed-term,
progressive "time-out" intervals.
These intervals apply to all postings
from the person during the time-out period.
Two or more moderators must agree
to impose a time-out on a member.
Time-out nominations
from a single moderator
expire after three days.
The first time-out assigned is 3-days long.
During the time-out, all postings from the
e-mail address of the member
are rejected by the mod-bot.
Rejected postings will be returned to the sender by email.
A second time-out within a 1-year period
increases the length of the timeout to 1 week.
Each subsequent time-out within a 1-year window
is a week longer than the previous one,
up to a maximum of 3 months.
After one year of no time-outs,
the length of the time-out for any given member
is reset to 3-days.
This table shows the cooling off times
for each time-out within a year:
|
first
|
3 days |
|
second
|
1 week |
|
third
|
2 weeks |
|
fourth
|
3 weeks |
|
fifth
|
4 weeks |
|
. . .
|
. . . |
|
fourteenth
|
13 weeks |
Members placed in time-out
are notified via e-mail.
No public announcements of actions taken
will be made in the newsgroup.
[6]
Usenet and Internet e-mail occasionally lose messages,
and the moderators can have no control
over what happens to messages on their way to or from
the moderation system.
Notification will be done on a best-effort basis.
WHY AUTO-MODERATION?
The concept of an auto-moderator was talked about for a long time on Usenet.
This group was the first formal USENET group
to actually use an automoderator program (the mod-bot) for its operation.
The auto-moderation method was proposed and approved
due to a sense-of-the-net
feeling that another
un-moderated soc.religion newsgroup
would not be approved by the Usenet powers-that-be,
and yet the "character" of a UU newsgroup
would be best achieved by as minimal a set
of moderation policies as possible.
The current auto-moderation software attempts to meet this goal;
allowing posts to occur nearly as freely
as an unmoderated group with minimal delay,
yet allowing the newsgroup readership and moderators
to protect the group from deliberate or inadvertent attacks
of SPAMing, abusive members or other net.mayhem.
Since the creation of this newsgroup,
other newsgroups have developed automated moderation methods,
and a number of auto-moderation software packages are available for use.
THE CAST AND CREW OF SOC.RELIGION.UNITARIAN-UNIV
The current moderators of s.r.u-u are:
The Mod-Bot software, and the hosting of S.R.U-U are provided by the
courtesy and efforts of our host and group "owner":
-
John Levine has been involved in Usenet since 1981,
and is an author of several books,
including "The Internet for Dummies" and "Unix for Dummies".
He's not currently a member of any church,
although he does host the web site for and occasionally attends
the First Unitarian Church of Ithaca (N.Y.)
-
Greg Woodbury has been using computers since 1958,
and is a Systems Programmer and writer in Durham, North Carolina.
He has been involved in Usenet as a user and administrator
since its inception at Duke University in 1979.
He is a member of the Eno River Unitarian Universalist Fellowship.
-
Michael Tino is the Coordinator of Shared Ministry
at the Eno River UU Fellowship in Durham, NC.
Born and raised in New York City,
he holds a doctorate in Cell Biology from Duke University;
despite that, his true calling is in community organizing and ministry.
In his spare time, he is the Asst. Teen Director
of the Southeast UU Summer Institute (SUUSI),
his district's male teacher trainer for the
Our Whole Lives curriculum,
a co-chair of the LGBT Action Team at ERUUF,
a member-on-loan to the All Soul's UU Church in Durham,
and a crisis counselor/advocate/community educator
with Rape Crisis Center of Durham.
-
Holli Emore is a Development Consultant for non-profit groups,
living in Columbia, SC.
Her path to UUdom began with a Lutheran childhood,
exploration of Jewishness,
fundamentalist Christianity and Episcopalianism.
Along the way she acquired three nearly-grown children,
three ex-husbands
and an art history degree.
-
Bert Christensen is a former president and board member
of the Canadian Unitarian Council,
and has been a member of the Board of Trustees of the UUA.
He resides in Toronto, Ontario, Canada,
with his wife Louise Ripley,
youngest son Erik,
Amber the greyhound and other pets and computers.
Bert is retired from his electronics servicing business but
keeps busy being a househusband, working on his web site,
and volunteering at First Unitarian Congregation of Toronto
where he and Louise are members.
-
Lance Brown is a computer programmer and systems administrator
at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.
He is a member of the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Hillsboro.
NOTES ON NETWORK NEWS ETIQUETTE
(by Greg Woodbury)
Since its creation in 1979,
NetNews/Usenet[5]
has developed as a "virtual culture"
with a set of conventions and "rules" by which it operates.
The underpinning of all these rules and conventions
is an assumption that the readers and posters wish to
communicate with each other.
Along with these rules, are a set of values,
which are much harder to define in any reasonable manner.
I will venture to say, however, that there is a radical belief (in general)
in favor of minimal interference with the free expression of individuals.
There are those who think this applies to all expressions
(including SPAM, porn, hate, etc.)
And there are those who feel that there are
reasonable limitations which can be placed on the postings.
I am definitely in the latter camp.
I base this on an understanding of the operational status of Usenet.
Usenet is perhaps the only operative anarchy in existence
that has lasted for more than 10 years.
(Note: anarchy does not imply the lack of coordination.)
Each site that participates in Usenet does so because its owners believe
that they will benefit by participation.
Each site contributes resources to the effort,
and (by definition) agrees to exchange messages in a common
format with other participating sites.
Each site represents a computer where the owners
have a proprietary interest in preserving their ownership
and control.
To this end, each site can, and does,
make its own decisions on which newsgroups to receive and send.
Finally, each site agrees to honor
the policies of the sites to which it connects.
It is this agreement,
which generally exists only as a verbal "gentlemen's agreement"
that makes Usenet an anarchy.
The aggregate effect of all these trust agreements
is that the policy of the net tends to a common set of conventions.
These conventions are the "rules" of Usenet.
The following bullet items present a sampling of
the "core" set of conventions.
(Courtesy of Margy Levine Young and news.announce.newusers)
-
Avoid excessive quoting - the readers have memories,
only include as much previous text as is minimally necessary
to provide context.
-
Don't post text that extends beyond 72 columns.
Not everyone has wide screen capabilities,
some news programs will (badly) re-wrap lines that are too wide,
and there needs to be some room
so that quotations don't get pushed beyond the margins.
-
Be careful in preserving the correct attributions of quotes.
Attributing certain statements to the wrong person is rude,
and likely to lead to conflicts
that are unnecessary and 'harmful' to the noise level of the group.
-
Preserve Subject line appropriateness -- if the topic is still on track
with the Subject line, don't change it gratuitously;
if the topic has changed substantially,
and the Subject line no longer applies,
then change it (with notice.)
The main reason for this is so that the readers can decide
from the Subject lines
whether they have an interest in that particular discussion thread.
The contents of the Subject: line
are used by many newsreader programs
to organize articles into threads.
-
Don't post SPAM, commercials, or chain letters.
See www.cauce.org for details.
-
Don't post material written by others without their permission.
This specifically applies to materials from all commercial sources.
-
Don't post private e-mail that you receive without permission.
This is an incredibly rude act, and a violation of copyright.
Note however, that posting received threats
and harassing email is well justified in many cases.
-
Note that posting to a newsgroup has an implication
that folks who read your article will reply by email.
If you don't want this to happen,
put a notice in the article,
or reconsider whether you want to participate in Usenet at all.
-
Single emails from Usenet readers are not harassment.
The basic assumption of wanting to communicate implies dialogue.
If you don't want email as a result of posting,
reconsider whether you want to post it as an article at all.
-
Don't post information that has already been recently posted,
or more than once to the group in similar words
(whether by you or by others).
-
Before you submit a follow-up to a message,
read the rest of the messages in the newsgroup
to see whether someone has already said what you want to say.
If someone has, don't repeat it.
-
Don't attack or denigrate list or group members
or moderators
(but feel free to debate the points that people have made).
-
Don't post regarding criticism of other subscribers' newsreaders,
posting style, spelling, grammar, or netiquette
(these criticisms should be sent by e-mail to the poster in question).
-
Make sure that your posts contain more new material than quoted material,
including quotes only as needed to support your point
(but quoting so as to maintain the original meaning of the quotes).
-
Don't post attached files or other non-ASCII information.
Avoid HTML or other non-text formatted messages.
(Except in specific "binaries-only" newsgroups.)
-
Don't post "flames" (angry messages that create more heat than light)
or "trolls"
(messages designed to generate flames
or extreme controversy in the targeted newsgroups).
-
Every few months a plague descends on Usenet called the spelling flame.
It starts out when someone posts an article correcting the spelling
or grammar in some article.
The immediate result seems to be for everyone on the net
to turn into a 6th grade English teacher
and pick apart each other's postings for a few weeks.
This is not productive and tends to cause people
who used to be friends to get angry with each other.
Not everyone on the net has English as their native tongue.
-
Advertisements on Usenet are rarely appreciated.
In general, the louder or more inappropriate the ad is,
the more antagonism it will stir up.
The
news.announce.newusers
newsgroup postings,
"Rules for posting to Usenet"
and "Advertising on Usenet: How To Do It, How Not To Do It"
have more information on this subject.
-
Pick your words carefully.
Writing with precision is as important
(maybe more importanti)
here as it is in any other kind of discourse.
Consider carefully whether what you have written
can be misinterpreted,
and whether that is something you wish to have happen.
-
Read the newsgroup news.announce.newusers -- regularly.
Even if you've been on the net
since "before the beginning"
the articles found there
provide a convenient review anytime.
FOOTNOTES
-
The last component of the newsgroup name is limited
to 14 characters for historical reasons. Older machines generally had file
names limited to 14 characters.
-
"moratorium"
(From Latin "mora" to delay)
2. a suspension of activity.
-
This item used to read:
Meta-discussions[7] about the group itself
should be limited to one topical thread at a time.
Preferably, such a thread should contain the string "[META]"
in the Subject line.
-
The majordomo mailing list program
derives its name from the Latin major domus "The chief of the
house," and its modern meaning of butler or
steward.
-
The original version of the program
that defined the formats that became Usenet was named "netnews".
The moniker "Usenet" was coined by Jim Ellis(?),
of Duke University,
when the program was released to the Usenix conference participants
in 1979.
-
This item used to read:
The newsgroup is also notified of the action
by an automatically generated posting.
-
Meta-discussion uses the prefix form
meta- in its sense of transcending and as a parallel
to the definition of metalanguage to mean
"discussion about discussion." This is a meta-footnote.
Corrections, comments or additions to this document should be sent
to:
ggw@wolves.durham.nc.us
Last update: April 27, 1999