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Usenet
is a world-wide distributed discussion system. It consists of a set
of "newsgroups" with names that are classified hierarchically
by subject. "Articles" or "messages" are "posted" to
these newsgroups by people on computers with the appropriate software
-- these articles are then broadcast to other interconnected computer
systems via a wide variety of networks. Some newsgroups are "moderated";
in these newsgroups, the articles are first sent to a moderator for
approval before appearing in the newsgroup. Usenet is available on
a wide variety of computer systems and networks, but the bulk of
modern Usenet traffic is transported over either the Internet or
UUCP.
Why is Usenet so hard to define?
The
first thing to understand about Usenet is that it is widely misunderstood.
Every day on Usenet, the "blind men and the elephant" phenomenon
is evident, in spades. More flame wars arise because of a lack of understanding
of the nature of Usenet than from any other source. And consider that
such flame wars arise, of necessity, among people who are on Usenet.
Imagine, then, how poorly understood Usenet must be by those outside!
Usenet
is the set of people who exchange articles tagged with one or more
universally-recognized labels, called "newsgroups" (or "groups" for
short). There is often confusion about the precise set of newsgroups
that constitute Usenet; one commonly accepted definition is that
it consists of newsgroups listed in the periodic "List of Active
Newsgroups" postings which appear regularly in news.lists.misc
and other newsgroups. A broader definition of Usenet would include
the newsgroups listed in the article "Alternative Newsgroup
Hierarchies" (frequently posted to news.lists.misc). An even
broader definition includes even newsgroups that are restricted to
specific geographic regions or organizations. Each Usenet site makes
its own decisions about the set of groups available to its users;
this set differs from site to site.
(Note
that the correct term is "newsgroups"; they are not called
areas, bases, boards, bboards, conferences, round tables, SIGs, echoes,
rooms or usergroups! Nor, as noted above, are they part of the Internet,
though they may reach your site over it. Furthermore, the people
who run the news systems are called news administrators, not sysops.
If you want to be understood, be accurate.)
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