nanog mailing list archives

RE: Proposed list charter/AUP change?


From: "Hannigan, Martin" <hannigan () verisign com>
Date: Tue, 4 Jan 2005 13:23:28 -0500




The changes that people are discussing have little to do with
"what is" and "what isn't" on topic for the NANOG mailing list.

What it does have lots to do with is cooperating on examination
of the moderation and testing the current long-standing techniques
to determine if they need to be re-vamped to reflect sentiments 
of the community at large. 

To me, it's not a productive effort to micro-manage(or MERIT)
the list via the FAQ. The FAQ is a traditional and 
historically acceptable method of answering questions that are 
bound to come up repeatedly as a primary result of new participants 
from any source.

I am interested in discussing the possibilities of self-policing
the list. An example would be when I suggested you earn some stripes. 
I said it. You ignored it. I opened my killfile. You land on it.
That's much simpler. 

Writing complicated rules and creating a Politburo-like atmosphere
is in no-ones interest.

ObOp: Abuse desks are easily confused with SPAM since the context of
      abuse desk discussion is typically wrt ...SPAM. The earlier 
      email was more general, IMHO. 


-M<

--
Martin Hannigan                         (c) 617-388-2663
VeriSign, Inc.                          (w) 703-948-7018
Network Engineer IV                       Operations & Infrastructure
hannigan () verisign com



-----Original Message-----
From: owner-nanog () merit edu [mailto:owner-nanog () merit edu]On Behalf Of
Bill Nash
Sent: Tuesday, January 04, 2005 12:51 PM
To: Steve Sobol
Cc: Susan Harris; nanog () merit edu; Betty Burke
Subject: Proposed list charter/AUP change?



On Mon, 3 Jan 2005, Steve Sobol wrote:
Susan keeps on claiming spam is offtopic for Nanog, yet the 
AUP/Charter/FAQ 
don't mention spam other than telling us not to ask "I'm 
being spammed, how 
can I make it stop?"

If it's flat-out offtopic, no matter what, or if the 
majority of list members 
don't want to talk about it on the list, why hasn't the FAQ 
been updated? Or 
does Merit just want us to try to guess what is offtopic?


Spam represents a significant percentage of email traffic, and its 
delivery is increasingly via trojaned dsl/broadband devices. 
Even spam 
delivered from quasi-legitimate sources is usually an abuse 
of resources 
that some NSP/ISP is paying for. Discussion of functional 
spam control at 
the ISP level, I think, is absolutely on topic for a list of 
this scope. 
Please note, that I say 'functional'. Random complaints would 
obviously 
not fall into this category.

Examples would include:
Working enterprise-scale spam filtering (Hourly mail volume 
measured in 
thousands)
Discussion of edge/core SMTP filtering to curtail spam sources.
Policy discussions for handling domestic and international 
spam sources.
Implementation, or requests for implementation, of SPF and similiar 
controls.
Inter-network cooperation for handling large scale issues.

I think this last is pretty much exactly what a list like 
this is for, be 
it spam, regional power outages, BGP shenanigans, or 
widespread squirrel 
detonations.

- billn



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