Date: Sun, 7 Oct 2001 21:14:47 -0700 From: Adam McKenna <adam-nanog@flounder.net>
On Sun, Oct 07, 2001 at 12:34:45PM -0700, Paul Vixie wrote:
Most mailing lists I am on seem to get by fine without overt moderation - including this one.
[...snip...]
You've conveniently failed to address the issue where the list moderator of namedroppers took it upon himself to edit the content of posts before forwarding them to the list.
You know, as the former editor/moderator of the Info-IBMPC Digest list for a fair number of years, and not having subscribed to the namedroppers list, I frequently edited the content of postings (if only to make them more readable and/or to tone down rantings), rejected others (sometimes with an explanation of how to make it more suitable for publication, sometimes without one. Usually with an explanation though...) Sometimes I ran the changes by the submitter, sometimes not... Depended on how much 'editing' I had to do.
Prefiltering to suit *any* one individuals opinion of what is or isn't on topic seems highly suspect for any list, and unacceptable on a list supposedly to define policy.
so in order for a policy-defining forum to be considered representative, it must be open to all posts on all topics from all parties at all times? that does not match not my intuition on the matter.
This is a straw man. The messages that were sent clearly fell within the list's charter, yet they were rejected and/or edited by the moderator for what appear to be entirely personal reasons.
The moderator (editor, in my case) really has the final call on what gets posted and what doesn't... Sorry, but them's the rules. In any case, this is straying a bit afield of the charter for nanog... Regards, Gregory Hicks --------------------------------------------------------------------- Gregory Hicks | Principal Systems Engineer Cadence Design Systems | Direct: 408.576.3609 555 River Oaks Pkwy M/S 6B1 | Fax: 408.894.3479 San Jose, CA 95134 | Internet: ghicks@cadence.com "There is no limit to what a man can do or how far he can go if he doesn't mind who gets the credit." - Robert Woodruff