• RFD: Remove rec.radio.broadcasting

    From Tristan Miller@tmiller@big-8.org to news.announce.newgroups,news.groups.proposals on Fri Dec 1 11:47:52 2023
    From Newsgroup: news.groups.proposals

    This is a formal Request for Discussion (RFD) to remove the moderated
    newsgroup rec.radio.broadcasting.


    Newsgroups Line:

    rec.radio.broadcasting Discussion of global domestic broadcast radio. (Moderated)


    Distribution:
    news.announce.newgroups
    news.groups.proposals


    Proponent: Tristan Miller <tmiller@big-8.org>


    Charter:

    Rec.radio.broadcasting (r.r.b) will be for discussion of a wide
    variety of subjects pertaining to the general arena of entertainment/information radio. While not specifically limited to
    North American broadcasting, r.r.b will avoid dealing with
    international (shortwave) broadcasts because this topic is already
    being handled in rec.radio.shortwave.

    Valid subjects for discussion might include (but not be limited to);

    1) Programming and formats
    2) Technical and engineering matters
    3) Concerns of smaller market stations
    4) Innovations and legislation affecting the medium
    (and those attempting to enter it)
    5) Radio's historical & cultural significance
    6) Radio news coverage and it's impact on our nation and our world.
    7) Audience input and ideas for improving the state of radio
    broadcasting.


    Since rec.radio.noncommercial is the only Usenet group pertaining to
    domestic broadcast radio, r.r.b would provide a forum for those
    individuals who's interest in the medium is not limited to the
    non-commercial arena. I believe this group would be of great interest
    to Usenet participants because ...

    1) Everybody listens to, and is affected by, radio broadcasting. It
    is the only mass media in which one can fully participate, while
    engaged in another activity.

    2) Colleges and universities currently train, and graduate, thousands
    of potential radio professionals every year. These individuals
    would be very likely to participate in such a forum to discuss and
    compare notes on their chosen field of endeavor.

    3) The face of radio is always changing. Satellite feeds, automation,
    and other influences are molding the future of the medium. This
    newsgroup would be a link between interested parties from all
    corners of the industry, keeping one-another up to date on the
    latest trends impacting radio broadcasting in America an beyond.


    Rationale for removal:

    On 2021-10-02 the remaining moderation team of rec.radio.broadcasting
    announced that the newsgroup would no longer be active due to low
    newsgroup activity and their belief that Usenet is obsolete. The
    announcement was posted to the newsgroup itself and to several related
    venues, including the Radio Discussions blog and several broadcast radio-related Facebook groups. None of the replies to this
    announcement suggested that any replacement moderators were likely to
    step forward. The moderation system was therefore shut down a few
    weeks after the announcement and no new articles have been approved
    since then.

    It was suggested that there be a two-year "cooling off" period before initiating any public discussion to formally remove the group from the
    Big-8 hierarchy via an rmgroup, in part to allow extra time for any
    replacement moderators to come forward. However, in the last two
    years, no prospective moderators have approached the the Big-8
    Management Board.

    Formally removing the group from the ISC active list will provide
    wider public notification that it is no longer active. This will
    reduce the chance of people inadvertently posting to the group (and
    possibly becoming confused about why their posts never pass
    moderation). It will also help ensure that the group is removed or
    marked as read-only by news servers and gateways.


    History of the Group:

    1992-02-24: 1st RFD (create)
    1992-03-30: 1st CFV
    1992-04-09: 2nd CFV
    1992-04-20: 3rd CFV
    1992-05-01: Result: rec.radio.broadcasting passes 234:34


    Procedure:

    Those who wish to comment on this request to remove this newsgroup
    should subscribe to news:news.groups.proposals and participate in the
    relevant threads in that newsgroup.

    To this end, the followup header of this RFD has been set to news.groups.proposals.

    All discussion of active proposals should be posted to
    news.groups.proposals.

    If desired by the readership of closely affected groups, the
    discussion may be crossposted to those groups, but care must be taken
    to ensure that all discussion appears in news.groups.proposals as
    well.

    For more information on the newsgroup removal process, please see http://www.big-8.org/wiki/Removing_newsgroups


    History of this RFD:

    2023-12-01: 1st RFD (remove)
    --
    Usenet Big-8 Management Board
    https://www.big-8.org/
    board@big-8.org

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Steve Bonine@spb@pobox.com to news.groups.proposals on Sat Dec 2 06:35:13 2023
    From Newsgroup: news.groups.proposals

    Tristan Miller wrote:

    It was suggested that there be a two-year "cooling off" period before initiating any public discussion to formally remove the group from the
    Big-8 hierarchy via an rmgroup, in part to allow extra time for any replacement moderators to come forward.-a However, in the last two
    years, no prospective moderators have approached the the Big-8
    Management Board.

    Formally removing the group from the ISC active list will provide
    wider public notification that it is no longer active.-a This will
    reduce the chance of people inadvertently posting to the group (and
    possibly becoming confused about why their posts never pass
    moderation).-a It will also help ensure that the group is removed or
    marked as read-only by news servers and gateways.

    So for two years there has been the issue of "people inadvertently
    posting to the group (and possibly becoming confused about why their
    posts never pass moderation)" and now there's a reason to remove the
    group? The only result will be the removal of the historical posts in
    the newsgroup; I've never seen a newsgroup admin who reacted to a
    rmgroup by marking the group read-only. I don't know if "read only" is
    even a possibility; I've never seen a newsreader that supported it.

    Not that I think there are people clamoring to peruse 20-year-old Usenet material, but there are many dead moderated newsgroups and I think the consensus was that removing them is a waste of time when the discussion
    was held years ago.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Marco Moock@mm+usenet-es@dorfdsl.de to news.groups.proposals on Sat Dec 2 06:35:13 2023
    From Newsgroup: news.groups.proposals

    Am 01.12.2023 um 23:03:46 Uhr schrieb Tristan Miller:

    Formally removing the group from the ISC active list will provide
    wider public notification that it is no longer active. This will
    reduce the chance of people inadvertently posting to the group (and
    possibly becoming confused about why their posts never pass
    moderation). It will also help ensure that the group is removed or
    marked as read-only by news servers and gateways.

    Are there still reader?
    Did somebody post in those 2 years?
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Tristan Miller@tmiller@big-8.org to news.groups.proposals on Sat Dec 2 06:44:17 2023
    From Newsgroup: news.groups.proposals

    Greetings.

    On 2023-12-02 13:35, Steve Bonine wrote:
    I've never seen a newsgroup admin who reacted to a rmgroup by marking
    the group read-only.-a I don't know if "read only" is even a possibility; I've never seen a newsreader that supported it.

    I'm informed that Google Groups used to process rmgroups by marking the
    group as read-only on their news-to-web gateway. Nowadays they don't
    seem to process control messages at all, but there may be other
    news-to-web or news-to-mail gateways that do.

    Regards,
    Tristan
    --
    Usenet Big-8 Management Board
    https://www.big-8.org/
    board@big-8.org
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Tristan Miller@tmiller@big-8.org to news.groups.proposals on Sat Dec 2 06:44:17 2023
    From Newsgroup: news.groups.proposals

    Greetings.

    On 2023-12-02 13:35, Marco Moock wrote:
    Am 01.12.2023 um 23:03:46 Uhr schrieb Tristan Miller:

    Formally removing the group from the ISC active list will provide
    wider public notification that it is no longer active. This will
    reduce the chance of people inadvertently posting to the group (and
    possibly becoming confused about why their posts never pass
    moderation). It will also help ensure that the group is removed or
    marked as read-only by news servers and gateways.

    Are there still reader?
    Did somebody post in those 2 years?

    No, except for this RFD, no one has successfully posted to rec.radio.broadcasting in the past two years.

    Regards,
    Tristan
    --
    Usenet Big-8 Management Board
    https://www.big-8.org/
    board@big-8.org
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Jesse Rehmer@jesse.rehmer@blueworldhosting.com to news.groups.proposals on Sat Dec 2 07:42:23 2023
    From Newsgroup: news.groups.proposals

    On Dec 2, 2023 at 6:35:13rC>AM CST, "Steve Bonine" <spb@pobox.com> wrote:

    So for two years there has been the issue of "people inadvertently
    posting to the group (and possibly becoming confused about why their
    posts never pass moderation)" and now there's a reason to remove the
    group? The only result will be the removal of the historical posts in
    the newsgroup; I've never seen a newsgroup admin who reacted to a
    rmgroup by marking the group read-only. I don't know if "read only" is
    even a possibility; I've never seen a newsreader that supported it.

    Not that I think there are people clamoring to peruse 20-year-old Usenet material, but there are many dead moderated newsgroups and I think the consensus was that removing them is a waste of time when the discussion
    was held years ago.

    I'm building a Usenet archive and have my server setup to not automatically process rmgroup control messages, but instead mail them to me for review. Then I set the group(s) not to allow local posts. I'm a rarity, I think.

    INN has these options for a newsgroup's status that change behavior when a server receives an article:

    y Local postings and articles from peers are allowed.
    m The group is moderated and all postings must be approved.
    n No local postings are allowed, only articles from peers.
    j Articles from peers are filed in the junk group instead.
    x No local postings, and articles from peers are ignored.
    =foo.bar Articles are filed in the group foo.bar instead.

    It would be nice if there were an automatic way to change the group's status
    to 'n' or 'x' from a rmgroup control message instead of removing the group,
    but I'm likely one of very few administrators who care to preserve old group contents.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Steve Bonine@spb@pobox.com to news.groups.proposals on Sat Dec 2 15:18:47 2023
    From Newsgroup: news.groups.proposals

    Jesse Rehmer wrote:
    On Dec 2, 2023 at 6:35:13rC>AM CST, "Steve Bonine" <spb@pobox.com> wrote:

    So for two years there has been the issue of "people inadvertently
    posting to the group (and possibly becoming confused about why their
    posts never pass moderation)" and now there's a reason to remove the
    group? The only result will be the removal of the historical posts in
    the newsgroup; I've never seen a newsgroup admin who reacted to a
    rmgroup by marking the group read-only. I don't know if "read only" is
    even a possibility; I've never seen a newsreader that supported it.

    Not that I think there are people clamoring to peruse 20-year-old Usenet
    material, but there are many dead moderated newsgroups and I think the
    consensus was that removing them is a waste of time when the discussion
    was held years ago.

    I'm building a Usenet archive and have my server setup to not automatically process rmgroup control messages, but instead mail them to me for review. Then
    I set the group(s) not to allow local posts. I'm a rarity, I think.

    INN has these options for a newsgroup's status that change behavior when a server receives an article:

    y Local postings and articles from peers are allowed.
    m The group is moderated and all postings must be approved.
    n No local postings are allowed, only articles from peers.
    j Articles from peers are filed in the junk group instead.
    x No local postings, and articles from peers are ignored.
    =foo.bar Articles are filed in the group foo.bar instead.

    It would be nice if there were an automatic way to change the group's status to 'n' or 'x' from a rmgroup control message instead of removing the group, but I'm likely one of very few administrators who care to preserve old group contents.

    This is interesting information. My question is ... what is the user experience related to these status settings? Does the reader get any
    notice that they cannot post to the group? Of course, this is a
    somewhat unanswerable question since the user experience is determined
    by the news reader, not the news server.

    And yes, you are a rarity, but the moniker "runs news server" is enough
    to insure that status.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Jesse Rehmer@jesse.rehmer@blueworldhosting.com to news.groups.proposals on Sat Dec 2 20:06:06 2023
    From Newsgroup: news.groups.proposals

    On Dec 2, 2023 at 3:18:47rC>PM CST, "Steve Bonine" <spb@pobox.com> wrote:

    Jesse Rehmer wrote:
    On Dec 2, 2023 at 6:35:13rC>AM CST, "Steve Bonine" <spb@pobox.com> wrote:

    So for two years there has been the issue of "people inadvertently
    posting to the group (and possibly becoming confused about why their
    posts never pass moderation)" and now there's a reason to remove the
    group? The only result will be the removal of the historical posts in
    the newsgroup; I've never seen a newsgroup admin who reacted to a
    rmgroup by marking the group read-only. I don't know if "read only" is
    even a possibility; I've never seen a newsreader that supported it.

    Not that I think there are people clamoring to peruse 20-year-old Usenet >>> material, but there are many dead moderated newsgroups and I think the
    consensus was that removing them is a waste of time when the discussion
    was held years ago.

    I'm building a Usenet archive and have my server setup to not automatically >> process rmgroup control messages, but instead mail them to me for review. Then
    I set the group(s) not to allow local posts. I'm a rarity, I think.

    INN has these options for a newsgroup's status that change behavior when a >> server receives an article:

    y Local postings and articles from peers are allowed.
    m The group is moderated and all postings must be approved.
    n No local postings are allowed, only articles from peers.
    j Articles from peers are filed in the junk group instead.
    x No local postings, and articles from peers are ignored.
    =foo.bar Articles are filed in the group foo.bar instead.

    It would be nice if there were an automatic way to change the group's status >> to 'n' or 'x' from a rmgroup control message instead of removing the group, >> but I'm likely one of very few administrators who care to preserve old group >> contents.

    This is interesting information. My question is ... what is the user experience related to these status settings? Does the reader get any
    notice that they cannot post to the group? Of course, this is a
    somewhat unanswerable question since the user experience is determined
    by the news reader, not the news server.

    And yes, you are a rarity, but the moniker "runs news server" is enough
    to insure that status.

    Servers should return a 441 response (posting failed), at least INN's nnrpd does, how clients interpret/display varies greatly.

    The raw message returned from my server when this occurs is:

    441 Postings to "some.group.not.allowed" are not allowed here
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Russ Allbery@eagle@eyrie.org to news.groups.proposals on Sat Dec 2 20:38:03 2023
    From Newsgroup: news.groups.proposals

    Jesse Rehmer <jesse.rehmer@blueworldhosting.com> writes:

    Servers should return a 441 response (posting failed), at least INN's
    nnrpd does, how clients interpret/display varies greatly.

    The raw message returned from my server when this occurs is:

    441 Postings to "some.group.not.allowed" are not allowed here

    The drawback, of course, is that by that point the reader has already
    written their post.

    Ideally, the client should figure out that it will never be able to post
    to that group and not allow the user to start. I think the only standard
    way to do that is to parse the newsgroup flags from LIST ACTIVE. The extensions discussed here are documented in RFC 6048, but I'm not sure how widely implemented they are. They've been in INN forever, but were never
    that widely used, and there's no standardized way to set any of those
    other fields in control messages. (RFC 5537 allows other control message
    verbs for newgroup, but no other ones have been standardized.)
    --
    Russ Allbery (eagle@eyrie.org) <https://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/>
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Tristan Miller@tmiller@big-8.org to news.announce.newgroups,news.groups.proposals on Fri Dec 22 17:24:35 2023
    From Newsgroup: news.groups.proposals

    This is a formal Request for Discussion (RFD) to remove the moderated
    newsgroup rec.radio.broadcasting.


    Newsgroups Line:

    rec.radio.broadcasting Discussion of global domestic broadcast radio. (Moderated)


    Distribution:
    news.announce.newgroups
    news.groups.proposals


    Proponent: Tristan Miller <tmiller@big-8.org>


    Charter:

    Rec.radio.broadcasting (r.r.b) will be for discussion of a wide
    variety of subjects pertaining to the general arena of entertainment/information radio. While not specifically limited to
    North American broadcasting, r.r.b will avoid dealing with
    international (shortwave) broadcasts because this topic is already
    being handled in rec.radio.shortwave.

    Valid subjects for discussion might include (but not be limited to);

    1) Programming and formats
    2) Technical and engineering matters
    3) Concerns of smaller market stations
    4) Innovations and legislation affecting the medium
    (and those attempting to enter it)
    5) Radio's historical & cultural significance
    6) Radio news coverage and it's impact on our nation and our world.
    7) Audience input and ideas for improving the state of radio
    broadcasting.


    Since rec.radio.noncommercial is the only Usenet group pertaining to
    domestic broadcast radio, r.r.b would provide a forum for those
    individuals who's interest in the medium is not limited to the
    non-commercial arena. I believe this group would be of great interest
    to Usenet participants because ...

    1) Everybody listens to, and is affected by, radio broadcasting. It
    is the only mass media in which one can fully participate, while
    engaged in another activity.

    2) Colleges and universities currently train, and graduate, thousands
    of potential radio professionals every year. These individuals
    would be very likely to participate in such a forum to discuss and
    compare notes on their chosen field of endeavor.

    3) The face of radio is always changing. Satellite feeds, automation,
    and other influences are molding the future of the medium. This
    newsgroup would be a link between interested parties from all
    corners of the industry, keeping one-another up to date on the
    latest trends impacting radio broadcasting in America an beyond.


    Rationale for removal:

    On 2021-10-02 the remaining moderation team of rec.radio.broadcasting
    announced that the newsgroup would no longer be active due to low
    newsgroup activity and their belief that Usenet is obsolete. The
    announcement was posted to the newsgroup itself and to several related
    venues, including the Radio Discussions blog and several broadcast radio-related Facebook groups. None of the replies to this
    announcement suggested that any replacement moderators were likely to
    step forward. The moderation system was therefore shut down a few
    weeks after the announcement and no new articles have been approved
    since then.

    It was suggested that there be a two-year "cooling off" period before initiating any public discussion to formally remove the group from the
    Big-8 hierarchy via an rmgroup, in part to allow extra time for any
    replacement moderators to come forward. However, in the last two
    years, no prospective moderators have approached the the Big-8
    Management Board.

    Formally removing the group from the ISC active list will provide
    wider public notification that it is no longer active. This will
    reduce the chance of people inadvertently posting to the group (and
    possibly becoming confused about why their posts never pass
    moderation). It will also help ensure that the group is removed or
    marked as read-only by news servers and gateways.


    Discussion so far:

    Steve Bonine expressed concern that removing the group would result in
    its historical posts being deleted from news servers, since he had
    never heard of admins reacting to rmgroups by marking groups as
    read-only. Tristan Miller and Jesse Rehmer gave examples of two news
    servers that do handle rmgroups in this way. Steve and Jesse
    indicated that such examples were rare. Marco Moock asked whether
    anyone had read or posted to the group in the past two years, and
    Tristan confirmed that there had been no successful posts.

    History of the Group:

    1992-02-24: 1st RFD (create)
    1992-03-30: 1st CFV
    1992-04-09: 2nd CFV
    1992-04-20: 3rd CFV
    1992-05-01: Result: rec.radio.broadcasting passes 234:34


    Procedure:

    Those who wish to comment on this request to remove this newsgroup
    should subscribe to news:news.groups.proposals and participate in the
    relevant threads in that newsgroup.

    To this end, the followup header of this RFD has been set to news.groups.proposals.

    All discussion of active proposals should be posted to
    news.groups.proposals.

    If desired by the readership of closely affected groups, the
    discussion may be crossposted to those groups, but care must be taken
    to ensure that all discussion appears in news.groups.proposals as
    well.

    For more information on the newsgroup removal process, please see http://www.big-8.org/wiki/Removing_newsgroups


    History of this RFD:

    2023-12-01: 1st RFD (remove)
    2023-12-22: 2nd RFD (remove)
    --
    Usenet Big-8 Management Board
    https://www.big-8.org/
    board@big-8.org
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From noel@deletethis@invalid.lan to news.groups.proposals on Thu Feb 1 11:52:28 2024
    From Newsgroup: news.groups.proposals

    On Sat, 02 Dec 2023 06:35:13 -0600, Steve Bonine wrote:



    So for two years there has been the issue of "people inadvertently
    posting to the group (and possibly becoming confused about why their
    posts never pass moderation)" and now there's a reason to remove the
    group? The only result will be the removal of the historical posts in
    the newsgroup; I've never seen a newsgroup admin who reacted to a
    rmgroup by marking the group read-only. I don't know if "read only" is
    even a possibility; I've never seen a newsreader that supported it.

    Not that I think there are people clamoring to peruse 20-year-old Usenet material, but there are many dead moderated newsgroups and I think the consensus was that removing them is a waste of time when the discussion
    was held years ago.


    Late to the party I know, but, how about just removing the moderation and allow the group to remain, just, "open"
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From John Doe@john.doe@myemail.invalid to news.groups.proposals on Thu Feb 1 18:45:35 2024
    From Newsgroup: news.groups.proposals

    On Feb 1, 2024 at 12:52:28rC>PM EST, "noel" <deletethis@invalid.lan> wrote:

    On Sat, 02 Dec 2023 06:35:13 -0600, Steve Bonine wrote:



    So for two years there has been the issue of "people inadvertently
    posting to the group (and possibly becoming confused about why their
    posts never pass moderation)" and now there's a reason to remove the
    group? The only result will be the removal of the historical posts in
    the newsgroup; I've never seen a newsgroup admin who reacted to a
    rmgroup by marking the group read-only. I don't know if "read only" is
    even a possibility; I've never seen a newsreader that supported it.

    Not that I think there are people clamoring to peruse 20-year-old Usenet
    material, but there are many dead moderated newsgroups and I think the
    consensus was that removing them is a waste of time when the discussion
    was held years ago.


    Late to the party I know, but, how about just removing the moderation and allow the group to remain, just, "open"

    I agree 100%. Make it unmoderated and let all posts be published.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Steve Bonine@spb@pobox.com to news.groups.proposals on Fri Feb 9 12:15:02 2024
    From Newsgroup: news.groups.proposals

    noel wrote:
    On Sat, 02 Dec 2023 06:35:13 -0600, Steve Bonine wrote:

    So for two years there has been the issue of "people inadvertently
    posting to the group (and possibly becoming confused about why their
    posts never pass moderation)" and now there's a reason to remove the
    group? The only result will be the removal of the historical posts in
    the newsgroup; I've never seen a newsgroup admin who reacted to a
    rmgroup by marking the group read-only. I don't know if "read only" is
    even a possibility; I've never seen a newsreader that supported it.

    Not that I think there are people clamoring to peruse 20-year-old Usenet
    material, but there are many dead moderated newsgroups and I think the
    consensus was that removing them is a waste of time when the discussion
    was held years ago.

    Late to the party I know, but, how about just removing the moderation and allow the group to remain, just, "open"

    Since you're following up to my post, maybe that encourages me to answer
    your question, which has been asked countless times in the life of
    Usenet. So I will be brief.

    Usenet is a decentralized facility with each server admin following
    their own rules. If a control message was sent in an attempt to change
    the moderation status of the group, some systems would act on it and
    some would not. This would change, not fix, the problem; if you posted
    on a system of the first flavor you would see your post but it would not
    be seen on the other flavor of system where the newsgroup was still
    marked as moderated.

    But ... why bother? Who is going to post to a newsgroup that has been
    dead for years?

    And ... why bother with attempting to remove THIS newsgroup when there
    are MANY dead moderated newsgroups in the list.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2