Searching for the Leviathan in Usenet








                                     A Thesis

                                   Presented to


                The Faculty of the Department of Political Science

                            San Jose State University


                              In Partial Fulfillment


                        of the Requirements for the Degree

                                  Master of Arts





                                        By

                              Richard Clark MacKinnon


                                  December, 1992























                               APPROVED FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL

                               SCIENCE



                               __________________________________________

                               ___

                                        Dr. William McCraw



                               __________________________________________

                               ___


                                        Dr. Kenneth Peter



                               __________________________________________

                               ___

                                        Dr. Ronald Sylvia



                               APPROVED FOR THE UNIVERSITY



                               __________________________________________

                               ___






                                       Abstract

                       Searching for the Leviathan in Usenet


                            by Richard Clark MacKinnon

         The purpose of this thesis is to identify signs of Thomas Hobbes'

         Leviathan in the Usenet computer conferencing network.  Certainly

         nothing that the Usenet users can experience can compare to the

         Hobbesian scenario in which persons are forced to give up the

         right to govern themselves in exchange for personal safety.  This

         is certainly true on the surface, but there is another level of

         interaction within Usenet other than user-to-user.  It is the

         level of the users' "personae," and it is at this level of

         understanding that the fear of vanishing from existence is ever

         present and near.  For personae within Usenet, life can be

         described as "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short."  And it

         is for their sakes that this researcher has searched for and

         found a Leviathan in Usenet.






                                       Contents


            Introduction ...........................................1


            Hobbes, Leviathan, and Usenet ..........................3


            Usenet is a Distinct Society ...........................8


            The Notion of Persona .................................14


            Personae are Persons ..................................21


            The Powers ............................................25


            The Pursuit of Powers .................................32


            Death .................................................37


            Living in Moderation ..................................43


            Looking for the Leviathan .............................55


            Conclusion ............................................59


            Appendix ..............................................66


            Glossary ..............................................85


            Bibliography ..........................................92



























                                          iv






                                     Introduction

         The purpose of this thesis is to identify signs of Thomas Hobbes'

         Leviathan in the Usenet computer conferencing network.  Defined

         as "that mortal god, to which we owe under the immortal God; our

         peace and defence,"1 Leviathan in a computer conferencing network

         is the institution of censorship or moderation of the messages

         written by the network's users.  According  to Hobbes, living in

         fear of death or wounds disposes men to obey a common power.2

         Certainly nothing that the Usenet users can experience can

         compare to the Hobbesian scenario in which persons are forced to

         give up the right to govern themselves in exchange for personal

         safety.  This is certainly true on the surface, but there is

         another level of interaction within Usenet other than user-to-

         user.  It is the level of the users' "personae," and it is at

         this level of understanding that the fear of vanishing from

         existence is ever present and near.  For personae within Usenet,

         life can be described as "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and

         short."3  And it is for their sakes that this researcher has

         searched for and found a Leviathan in Usenet.


         In order to argue this work, this paper is organized into short

         sections or chapters designed around major points.  The first

         chapter introduces the reader to Hobbes, _________
                                                  Leviathan, and Usenet.

         A glossary is provided to assist with technical computer

         terminology and an appendix contains relatively hard to find

         Usenet documentation.  The argument itself consists of seven

         points and a survey of two hundred randomly selected Usenet

         articles.  The survey was conducted to find measurable signs of

         the Leviathan as described in the argument.  The findings show

         the degree to which Leviathan is present in Usenet.  Each chapter

         states its purpose in the opening paragraphs and is concluded

         with a summary of the points covered therein.  In this way it is

         possible to lead the reader through the theoretical worlds of

         _________
         Leviathan and the Usenet persona.  At the end of the argument is

         a conclusion which summarizes all seven points and focuses on the

         most difficult ones.  And lastly, the thesis concludes with a

         short discussion of future research considerations.












               1Thomas Hobbes, _________
                               Leviathan, Edited by Michael Oakeshott (New

         York:  Macmillan Publishing Co., 1962), 132.


               2Hobbes, 82.


               3Hobbes, 100.



                                          1






                             Hobbes, _________
                                     Leviathan, and Usenet

            Hobbes' _________
                    Leviathan was selected for this thesis primarily

         because it is a system of knowledge developed for the purpose of

         understanding the genesis of government.  This system of

         knowledge for understanding the "matter, forme and power" of

         society, originally advanced during Cromwell's tenure, was

         published in 1651.  The controversial title implied that the

         monarchy was the political manifestation of the Biblical beast

         and the work was considered scandalous.


         Hobbes scholar Herbert Schneider explains that the choice of the

         title is curious because the mythological Leviathan is

         consistently the symbol of the "powers of evil, "4  rightfully

         upsetting the supporters of the Crown.  Yet it is clear when

         Hobbes describes the Leviathan as the "mortal god"5 on earth that

         he does not share the common diabolical connotation.  Certainly

         Hobbes was aware of this discrepancy and it is likely he intended

         for the discrepancy to further define his concept of a Leviathan

         rising from the people.  There is no doubt that such a "beast"

         would need to be menacing and powerful in order to convince

         people that their lives are safer with it than in their own

         hands.  The Leviathan is the generation of the Commonwealth, that

         entity consisting in the powers of all people which can protect

         them from their enemies.  Hobbes' critics were quick to equate

         the evil beast with government, thus putting Hobbes at odds with

         the regime indeed, with any government.  It is possible that

         Hobbes selected the Leviathan symbol in part to convey that

         government is a necessary evil given humans' inclination to

         destroy one another without it.  Even this notion brought Hobbes

         criticism as a paranoid anti-establishmentarian.  While he admits

         to a level of paranoia commensurate to being born the "twin of

         fear," he is emphatically not anti-establishment--in fact, he

         would have supported either Cromwell or the King as long as one

         of them possessed absolute power to govern as a Leviathan.  Given

         his dim view of human nature, his predilection toward paranoia,

         and the execution of the King, one cannot blame Hobbes for

         desiring peace and order at any price.

         Though never the intentional sum and highlight of his political,

         religious, ethical, and philosophical view, _________
                                                     Leviathan has

         nevertheless emerged as such.  This is because of Hobbes'

         precision in the use of language and his plain treatment and

         analysis of socially sensitive matter.  In his lifetime _________
                                                                 Leviathan

         earned Hobbes the enmity of many who had formerly been his

         friends.  Today it is still popularly trivialized as a dark and

         heretical treatise written by a paranoid exile.  But Hobbes'




               4Herbert W. Schneider, "The Piety of Hobbes," in ______
                                                                Thomas

         ______ __ ___ ____
         Hobbes in His Time, eds. Ralph Ross, Herbert W. Schneider, and

         Theodore Waldman (Minneapolis:  University of Minnesota Press,

         1974), 86.


               5Hobbes, 132.



                                          3




                                          4


         admirers and students appreciate the giant work for what it is--a

         reconstitution of civil society from its most basic element.  He

         begins his book with the ambitious sentence, "Concerning the

         thoughts of man, I will consider them first singly, and

         afterwards in train, or dependence upon one another."6


         Considering that his goal is to explain governance, one would

         expect that a beginning begun with a discussion of the "single

         thought" would immediately proceed to more developed concepts

         such as the rights of kings.  Not so.  After describing the

         nature of thought, he discusses the senses, imagination, dreams,

         the development of speech, passions, virtue, and the

         categorization of all knowledge.  It is not until Chapter Sixteen

         that he defines what a person is and in Chapter Eighteen he

         finally addresses the rights of sovereigns.  It is an

         understatement to say that Hobbes is thorough in his endeavor.

         Although this thesis focuses on the generation of Leviathan (at

         the end of Chapter Seventeen), it is important to realize that

         this study covers only a quarter of the book.

         The result is a self-contained, interlocking structure with every

         word defined and every conclusion logically sound.  In the

         writing of his book, Hobbes incidentally produced the first

         comprehensive attempt at the theory of language.  In other words,

         Hobbes had to develop a theory of language to accurately describe

         his theory of the commonwealth.  Richard Tuck remarks that

         _________
         Leviathan is the "first unquestionably great philosophical work"

         in English.7  Prior to _________
                                Leviathan, all scholarly works of import

         were written in Latin, French, German, or ancient Greek.8


         Since his endeavor was intentionally comprehensive, his treatise

         is unusually suitable for examining any and all societies--

         including those that did not exist in his time and as in the case

         of Usenet, arguably do not exist now.  This is possible because

         the treatise is presented mostly in general terms, giving it

         broad applicability and timelessness.  While it is true that

         _________
         Leviathan is a product of troubled times, Hobbes' sparing

         references to Britain merely illustrate his points and do not

         confine them to that island.  Additionally, his masterful

         understanding of philosophy beyond the realm of politics is

         useful in the establishment of personae and their virtual society

         of Usenet.

         Usenet is the largest computer conferencing network in the world.

         The network is composed of an estimated 2.3 million users at

         45,000 sites worldwide.  Most sites are academic institutions or

         high technology companies, but commercial and publicly supported




               6Hobbes, 21.


               7Richard Tuck, ______
                              Hobbes (Oxford:  Oxford UP, Clarendon,

         1957),  vii.


               8And undoubtedly, Chinese and Italian.




                                          5


         access is available to any interested group or individuals.

         Usenet users can send private messages to one another via

         electronic mail.  The mail can reach many sites on the planet

         within seconds.  The users can also write public messages known

         as "articles."  These articles are divided into approximately

         4,000 thousand categories called "newsgroups."  Newsgroups range

         in topics from political theory to baseball.  The current volume

         of articles is 14,000 daily.9


         Despite its size, Usenet has no central authority which monitors

         access or content.  All control, if any, is exercised at the site

         level.  Sites determine whether to provide access to users or

         whether they want to provide a "feed" or connection to a

         potential site.  Users and sites may remain on the net as long as

         the sites that provide them with access continue to do so.

         Usenet articles are distributed using a "store and forward"

         method.  This means that when a user writes an article, the

         original article is stored at his or her site and a copy is

         forwarded via telephone or leased line to neighboring sites.

         Because the associated costs of storage and forwarding can become

         very high, economics may have more of an impact over local

         control than anything else.  A company, for example, may decide

         to restrict users from participating in any of the recreational

         newsgroups because the volume in those groups is high and their

         business value is low.  Still, some organizations may opt to

         control content for other reasons.  For example, a high school

         may decide to block participation in sexually-oriented

         newsgroups.  However, thousands of users around the world enjoy

         unrestricted access to newsgroups containing articles from the

         technologically informative to the obscene.  Depending on the

         user consulted, Usenet can be an anarchic or a highly regulated

         medium of communication.


















               9Brian Reid, ______ __________ _______
                            Usenet Readership Summary (Palo Alto,

         California:  Network Measurement Project at the DEC Western

         Research Laboratory, March 1992), lines 22-28.  The lines are

         cited rather than page numbers because the document was received

         electronically without pagination.






                             Usenet is a Distinct Society

         In order to apply Hobbes' political philosophy to Usenet, it is

         important to establish the distinctness of the Usenet society.

         Distinctness assures that Usenet differs enough from the external

         world--the reality outside of Usenet--to provide a unique

         laboratory to cultivate new insights and new conclusions.  The

         argument for distinctness consists of Usenet's two-dimensional

         nature, its creation of an explicit language to describe its

         "physical" reality, its interference in the transfer of the

         social structure from the external world, and its ability to

         compensate for the lack of a complete social structure by

         developing a parallel or alternate structure to that of the

         external world.


         Although Usenet is designed to facilitate communication among

         computer users, it is restricted to written communication;

         therefore, it mitigates the amount and quality of communication

         possible among them.  Much like unintroduced penpals can never

         know the "real" persons behind their letters, Usenet users can

         never know the "real" persons behind the articles.  It is not

         possible to capture the range of interpersonal interaction with

         only the written word, transforming Usenet into a two-dimensional

         substitute for three-dimensional, "face-to-face" communication.

         As a result there is a deception in the medium that often

         distorts the meaning of a message, much as a carnival mirror

         distorts the reflection of a person:  what is "said" is not

         necessarily what is "heard," or more accurately, what is written

         is often misinterpreted.  Since ambiguity has this deceptive

         effect in the external world, Usenet participants are especially

         susceptible to ambiguous statements, implied meanings, and

         sarcastic remarks.  Whereas external world users can find clues

         to meaning in facial expressions and voice control, Usenet

         participants cannot.  But more importantly, the lack of cues

         available during "face-to-face" communication points not only to

         the absence of  faces, but to the absence of all physical

         reality.

         Lacking physical reality, Usenet users must create an explicit,

         written language to convey meaning as well as emotion, physical

         qualities, and action. As a society based in language, it relies

         heavily on symbol, analogy, and metaphor to re-create or transfer

         physical matter and actions from the external world.  But since

         these re-creations are merely metaphors for, or "analogs" of

         their physical counterparts, Usenet can never be a mirror image

         of the external world.


         Usenet users are unable to "bring" with them their respective

         social structures because the limitations of written

         communication deconstruct their external world social structure.

         These social structures consist of the norms, mores, and

         traditions which guide the users'  interaction as members of the

         external society.  The computer medium inhibits computer users

         from transferring these social structures to Usenet.  This

         inhibition resulting from the absence of or limitations on

         physical proximity, "face-to-face" interaction, and non-verbal


                                          8




                                          9


         cues, is discussed and analyzed at length in Elizabeth Reid's

         _____________  _____________ ___ _________ __ ________ _____
         Electropolis:  Communication and Community on Internet Relay

         ____
         Chat.   Reid exposes the failings of computer-mediated, i.e.,

         written,  communication as follows:



               Words, as we use them in speech, fail to express what they

           really mean once they are deprived of the subtleties of speech

           and the non-verbal cues that we assume will accompany it. . .

           . It is not only the meanings of sentences that become

           problematic in computer-mediated communication.  The standards

           of behavior that are normally decided upon by verbal-cues are

           not clearly indicated when information is purely textual.10

         The deprivation of the "subtleties" is exactly what makes

         communication and interaction among Usenet users different from a

         room full of computer users.  Computer users, as do all persons,

         learn standards of behavior from their respective social

         structures.  As Reid suggests, these standards are reinforced by

         "subtleties of speech and non-verbal cues."  But within Usenet,

         users limited to written communication are denied the full range

         of verbal and non-verbal cues customary to interpersonal

         communication and required for reinforcing behavioral standards.

         In the external world,  behavioral standards dictate that one

         should not provoke a visibly angry man, but in Usenet the

         absence, or least the distortion, of visible anger interferes

         with that standard of behavior.


         Despite the limitations of a society based upon written

         communication, Usenet users are able to compensate.  The

         "interference" or distortion caused by the written medium forces

         Usenet users to confront what Reid calls the deconstruction of

         the "traditional methods for expressing community" by developing

         "alternate or parallel methods."11  In this way, Usenet has

         become an alternate or distinct society from the external world.

         Usenet's parallel method or analog for conveying mores, norms,

         and traditions is known as "netiquette."  As the term implies, it

         is literally "network etiquette" and it helps to reinforce the

         standards of behavior that users might miss from the lack of

         non-verbal cues.  Several attempts have been made to summarize

         the norms of  "netiquette."  The most widely cited is Gene

         Spafford's series of documents12, which he compiled and edited

         from the suggestions of Usenet users.  Either heeded or ignored

         by many, the estimates of the validity of Spafford's guidelines

         vary, but they are often invoked to resolve a dispute or to




               10Elizabeth Reid, "Electropolis:  Communication and

         Community on Internet Relay Chat," thesis, (Melbourne, Australia:

         University of Melbourne UP:  1991), lines 495-505.


               11Reid, lines 200-206.


               12These documents are included in the Appendix.




                                          10


         "advise" one another.  In the following example, "Jack" from the

         University of  California at Irvine advises "Bill" from The

         Netherlands of a breach of "netiquette":



               Your reply to my post gave me mixed messages.  Some of

           your comments are cruel.  Your flame should have been sent

           directly to me via e-mail.13

         Since enforcement of "netiquette" begins with the individual

         users, consensual interpretation by the Usenet public determines

         the "law."  If a user's action offends one person in 10 million,

         that action is probably a slight breach, but nothing of wider

         concern; however, if an action results in thirty complaints, then

         it usually is treated more seriously.  "Netiquette" then, is the

         Usenet analog for the external world's system of mores, norms,

         and tradition.  While not a precise duplication of the external

         world's social structure, "netiquette" provides Usenet users with

         guidelines or standards of behavior.  Chuq Von Rospach, author of

         _ ______ __ ___ __ ____ ____ ___ ______ _________
         A Primer on How to Work with the USENET Community, writes,



               . . . for USENET to function properly those people must be

           able to interact in productive ways.  This document is

           intended as a guide to using the net in ways that will be

           pleasant and productive for everyone.  This document is not

           intended to teach you how to use USENET.  Instead, it is a

           guide to using it politely, effectively and efficiently.14

         It will be recalled that Reid suggests non-verbals cues reinforce

         the standards of behavior in the external world.  Just as

         "netiquette" developed into the Usenet analog for standards of

         behavior, a system of written cues has developed as an analog to

         reinforce those standards.  These cues, known as "emoticons" make

         use of non-standard punctuation, spelling, capitalization, and

         special keyboard characters to convey action, emotion, and

         emphasis.  An excerpt from Spafford's guidelines follows:



               The net has developed a symbol called the smiley face.  It

           looks like ":-)" and points out sections of articles with

           humorous intent.  No matter how broad the humor or satire, it

           is safer to remind people that you are being funny.15




               13All such examples are exerpts from actual Usenet

         communication.  The original punctuation and spacing has been

         left intact to preserve the intent of the message.  In the

         interest of privacy, the authors' surnames have been suppressed.


               14Chuq Von Rospach, _ ______ __ ___ __ ____ ____ ___ ______
                                   A Primer on How to Work With the USENET

         _________
         Community.  Compiled by Gene Spafford, 1987, lines 14-16.  See

         the Appendix for the complete text.


               15Von Rospach, lines 112-114.




                                          11


         This guideline emphasizes the use of emoticons to convey humor in

         order to avoid the consequences of ambiguous or sarcastic

         statements, but does not show the variety of possibilities, as in

         the following examples:



               Steve,

                       hahahahahahahhahahahahahahahahahahahahaa

                       *sniff* waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhh



               I laughed, i cried....that post was GREAT! :-)



               Amusedly,

                               -Mirth-

         In this message, "-Mirth-" from the Massachusetts Institute of

         Technology, has no difficulty sharing his or her amusement with

         an earlier "post" or message of  Steve's.  Note the use of the

         asterisks in "*sniff*" to convey action as opposed to simply

         saying "I sniffed," as is done later.  Of course, the

         capitalization in "GREAT" indicates emphasis, presumably

         enthusiasm given the presence of the "smiley."  Consider the next

         example from a user at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Canada:



               You know, I agree with everything you said. However, you

           loosely fall into the dweeb category by admitting you actually

           READ most of the damn thing. It brings no fame to its creator,

           but only humiliation to the human species (or does Kibo not

           fit into the homo sapien sapien category? Maybe there is a

           better division for an individual who's life is overwhelmed by

           USENET? homo sappy postus?)    *shakes his head, almost

           embarassed that he has a 4 line .sig, let alone a 950 line

           one*

         This article is an excerpt from a discussion on whether having a

         "950 line"  signature on an article is a violation of

         "netiquette."  The Canadian user agrees that a lengthy signature

         is a violation and becomes embarrassed when he realizes that his

         own "4 line .sig" is considered too long by most interpretations

         of "netiquette."  He conveys this realization by using asterisks

         to simulate the shaking of his head.


         To summarize, it is important to establish the distinctness of

         Usenet from the society of the external world so that new

         insights and new conclusions may be cultivated from the

         application of Hobbes' political philosophy.  This distinctness

         is established by Usenet's explicit language for conveying

         meaning, emotion, and action to a two-dimensional environment.

         Although Usenet users are able to compensate for the lack of a

         physical reality, their parallels or "analogs" with the outside

         world have resulted in a distinct reality of their own.






                                The Notion of Persona

         The high level of interaction between Usenet users in their

         distinct society results in the development of "personae."  The

         following discussion explores this development, the personae's

         ability to portray Usenet users to one another, the derivation of

         their "actions" from words, and the conditions for their

         existence.


         Usenet is distinguished from other written media by the level of

         interaction among its users.  A printed newspaper, for example,

         offers its readers a one-way medium.  Generally, a newspaper is a

         medium for the writers to communicate to their readers and not

         with them; however, the Opinion/Editorial page does provide for

         selected reader response.  There the opinions expressed are

         personal and not necessarily the view of the newspaper's staff.

         These opinions may be compelling or inane, but it is the names

         attached that remind one that there are individuals at the

         source.  These individuals, through the interaction of their

         opinions, briefly create a sense of community.  Granted, such a

         community is a fleeting one at best, for often the emergent

         dialogue is not a dialogue at all, but a set of coincident

         monologues submitted in reaction to a piece of news.  Any

         repartee is unintentional and possibly staged--selected--by the

         editor to represent a diversity of views.  In Usenet, dialogue is

         spontaneous and unedited, and the individuals at the source are

         users who frequently contribute on a regular basis.  The most

         active users contribute over fifty articles per week each.16

         This high level of interaction among Usenet users creates a more

         permanent sense of community than among a newspaper's readership.

         Accordingly, this high level of interaction among users provides

         opportunities to develop relationships.

         It has been established that the medium of written communication

         interferes with the transfer of the users' external world social

         structures into Usenet.  By the same means,  written

         communication interferes with the transfer of the users'

         personalities and unique qualities as well.  The result is the

         creation of "personae" which are as distinct from the users as

         Usenet society is distinct from the external world.  The external

         world of the users is a world of myriad objects to be sense-

         perceived ultimately to be desired or avoided.17  The nature of

         the users' known universe possesses physical characteristics that

         can be sense-perceived either directly or indirectly via

         technological extension of the senses or a combination of these

         accompanied by scientific deduction.  Words signify the memory of




               16UUNET Technologies, Inc., ___ __ ____ __________ __ ____
                                           Top 25 News Submitters by User

         __ ______ __ ________ ___ ___ ____  _ _____
         by Number of Articles for the Last  2 weeks (Falls Church,

         Virginia: July 24, 1992).


               17Hobbes, 48.





                                          14




                                          15


         sensory experience and thought18, but the physical things of the

         external world exist independently of the words which describe

         them.  Though important, words are not required for the existence

         of the things to which they refer.  But within Usenet, words are

         the sole means of characterizing the network's universe.  Thus,

         wordsmanship in Usenet is a far more valued skill than it is in

         the external world.  Consequently, possession or lack of this

         skill can inadvertently give the Usenet user a radically

         different persona from him or herself.  Accordingly,  a command

         of written language can empower a persona in Usenet beyond the

         relative strength of its user in the external world.


         The degree to which Usenet users resemble their personae seems to

         vary.  The representation of a user within Usenet is the

         attempted transfer of the user's individuality into a Usenet

         persona.  The user has some control over the representation and

         the extent to which the persona resembles himself or herself.  A

         representation is transparent when the user attempts to represent

         him or herself as he or she is; a representation is translucent

         when the Usenet persona is only a shadow of the user; and

         accordingly, a representation is opaque when the persona does not

         resemble the user at all.

         A user can spend a great amount of energy wondering about the

         "real" users behind the personae with which he or she interacts.

         In all cases where there is no direct knowledge of another user,

         if one cares, one must rely upon the word of that user as to

         whether that persona is an accurate representation.  Since it is

         in effect that user's word which is in question, relying upon it

         offers little relief.  Without direct or revealed knowledge, the

         pursuit of the true nature of representations is a matter for

         speculation.  Therefore, until the full truth is known, it is a

         common and expedient practice  to "forget" about the users behind

         the personae  so that any purported resemblance or dissimilarity

         of personae to users can be treated as if it does not matter.19


         Since Usenet is a medium for communication, any resemblance it

         may have to external world society necessarily must be reduced to

         written form.  Physical actions such as activating a computer or

         restricting access to another user's account are actions

         completed by users and not by their Usenet personae.  Users have

         physical form and are able to manipulate physical objects such as

         power switches and keyboards, but their Usenet personae have no

         physical form.  Therefore any interaction among  personae must be

         derived from the written words of their users.  Note that actions

         derived from written messages do not correspond exactly to those

         of the respective users.  For example, the action of a persona




               18Hobbes, 33.


               19We commonly "forget" complications for the sake of

         simplicity.  For example, it is simpler to think of the sun

         "rising" than it is to think of the earth turning.




                                          16


         which is "smiling," corresponds to the action of a user who is

         typing.  Although the action of "smiling" is derived from the

         words that the user types, the actions do not correspond exactly

         because the user may or may not be smiling and the persona is

         probably not "typing."


         It is the high level of interaction among Usenet users which

         gives their personae "life."  In fact, a single response to one's

         statement is sufficient to generate a persona.  That response,

         though minimal, is the foundation of existence within Usenet.  It

         is obvious that a response implies a cause or stimulus worthy of

         reaction; however it is less obvious that by implication it

         signifies an acknowledgement of that cause.  In terms of "cause"

         and "effect," a characteristic of the effect is the

         substantiation of its cause's existence.  In terms of Usenet, a

         response substantiates the existence of a statement.  This may

         seem trivial until it is recalled that Usenet personae are

         created as a result of the interaction among Usenet users.  This

         interaction consists of the cycle of statement and response.  The

         existence of the personae, therefore, is tied to that cycle.

         One may wonder why interaction is a prerequisite for a persona's

         existence.  In a written world such as Usenet, there is a

         stricter burden of proof for existence than Descartes requires in

         the external world.  A user can read and contemplate the words of

         another user, but unless there is a visible, i.e., written,

         response via his persona, the action of reading and contemplating

         goes unnoticed.  If a user is unnoticed, then he or she is not

         interacting with other users.  Because personae are created as a

         result of interaction, reading and contemplating alone are

         insufficient to generate or maintain the existence of a persona.

         As shown, "Cogito ergo sum" is an insufficient measure of

         existence within Usenet.  If all users kept their thoughts to

         themselves, they certainly would be assured of their own

         existences, but Usenet would be reduced to a non-interactive,

         indistinct, written medium.  Without some sort of response beyond

         interior cogitation, there is nothing to be perceived by other

         Usenet users.  "Network existentialism" is therefore more

         skeptical than Decartes' externalism can account for.


         However, a dialectical approach can be used to establish a

         measure for existence  within Usenet.  Whereas "I think,

         therefore I am" is insufficient for this purpose, so too is "I

         write, therefore I am."  Again, without a visible response, a

         written statement remains isolated and apparently unperceived--a

         persona's existence is neither generated nor substantiated.  A

         further modification to the premise results in, "I am perceived,

         therefore I am."  Suddenly the Usenet user is no longer alone,

         for to be perceived requires another.  The visible response, "I

         hear you" generates and substantiates the existence of the first

         user's persona, whereby a reply would perform the same function

         for the second user's persona.  The visible response is evidence

         of perception.  Without that response, the perception remains as

         an interior cogitation of the would-be respondent and does

         nothing to substantiate the existence of either user's persona.




                                          17


         The visible cycle of cause and effect, the users' statements,

         responses, restatements, and correspondence ensures the viability

         of the personae of both users.  When extended beyond them to the

         multitude of the personae within Usenet, the existence of all of

         them is assured.


         Where the parallel between dialectical existence in Usenet to

         independent existence in the external world might be difficult to

         follow, the parallel for the quality of life is more apparent.

         As in other aspects of the comparison of Usenet to the external

         world, persona existence is distinct from user existence.  Users

         require air, food, water, and other essentials for basic

         existence.  Personae, lacking physical form, do not require

         physical sustenance; nonetheless, they are dependent upon three

         essential conditions for existence.

         The first condition is the continued association between the user

         and the persona.  The loss of the user's access to Usenet severs

         the association to his or her persona.  Once Usenet loses its

         utility to the user, the continued association to the persona is

         threatened.  In other words, a persona's existence is dependent

         upon a user's access to Usenet; and a user maintains access to

         Usenet so long as Usenet remains useful.


         The second condition is the visible demonstration of presence.

         While Usenet may have great utility to a passive user,20 the lack

         of interaction with other users does not create a persona which

         exists in a way previously defined as existence within Usenet.

         The passive user remains outside the boundary of Usenet existence

         and his or her actions are unnoticed to "life" within.  This

         study concerns itself with those users who choose to participate.

         The third condition is that the participation is continuous.  A

         persona belonging to a user who is prevented, unable, or

         unwilling to continue to participate will continue to exist until

         the memory of that existence is forgotten by the other users.


         In summary, the two-dimensional nature of Usenet, caused by the

         medium of written communication, forces the development of

         personae among interacting users.  Further, the derived actions

         of the personae from the words of the users are distinct from the

         physical actions of the users.  Also there is sufficient

         distinctness to allow users to "forget" that they are interacting

         with representations of other users and not the users themselves.

         Finally, the personae exist dialectically21 and will continue to



               20A passive user is a user who does not or cannot

         communicate with other users, e.g., while using a library's

         online catalog.


               21

                 Prior to the "first cause," participant A is isolated in

         silence and unaware of "self" and "other"--existence is

         undefined.  Participant B, like A, is also alone and ignorant.

         Spontaneously, participant A wonders aloud, "What is my purpose,

         if any?"  B, surprised by the break in the silence and the

         presence of another, replies, "I don't know, but let's find out




                                          18


         exist as long as Usenet retains its utility to the users and the

         users continue to participate continuously via the cycle of

         statement and response.















































         together."  The phenomenon of mutual awareness implies the

         simultaneous awareness of the other and the self.  This

         rudimentary confirmation of existence-dependent-upon-another,

         i.e., co-existence, is sufficient enough to allow participants A

         and B to pursue the purposes of their existence together.






                                 Personae are Persons

         Having established the distinctness of Usenet's society and its

         persona population, it is possible to proceed with a preliminary

         parallel to _________
                     Leviathan.  Establishing the parallel between persons

         and personae will allow for the subsequent application of Hobbes'

         political philosophy to Usenet.  This parallel is established in

         the following discussion of Hobbes' definition of "person," the

         actions of personae, and the special form of representation known

         as "impersonation."


         Hobbes writes,



               A person is he, _____ _____ __ _______ ___ ___________
                               whose words or actions are considered,

           ______ ___ ____ __ __ ____________ ___ _____ __ _______ __
           either his own, or as representing the words or actions of

           _______ ___
           another man . . . When they are considered his own, then is he

           called a _______ ______
                    natural person:  and when they are considered as

           representing the words and actions of another, then is he a

           _______ __ __________ ______
           feigned or artificial person."22

         Having established that personae represent users to one another

         in Usenet, this definition seems to suggest that personae are

         indeed persons.  To explain, according to Hobbes a persona

         represents the "words or actions of another man." Indeed, a

         persona represents the words and actions of a user.  Further,

         Hobbes defines "personation" as "to act or represent oneself."23

         This being the precise purpose for personae in Usenet,

         "personation" is alternately definable as the "generation of a

         persona."  Therefore, in terms of Hobbes, Usenet users must

         "personate" themselves via personae because written communication

         prevents the users from acting and representing themselves in

         person.  In other words, personae are the Usenet analogs for

         persons in the external world.

         While it is true that a persona's actions represent the actions

         of a user, the distinctness of the persona from the user allows

         for the distinctness of the persona's actions.  Recall that all

         persona actions must necessarily be derived from the written

         responses of the users.  When a user writes a hostile message to

         another user, his or her persona in effect "attacks" the persona

         of the recipient.  Whether a persona is actually responsible for

         or "owns" the "attack," Hobbes writes:



               Of persons artificial, some have their words and actions

           _____
           owned by those whom they represent.  And then the person is

           the _____
               actor; and he that owneth his words and actions, is the





               22Hobbes, 125.  Hobbes tends to emphasize with

         capitalization and italics.  This emphasis will be preserved in

         all selected passages and quotations.


               23Hobbes, 125.



                                          21




                                          22


           AUTHOR:  in which case the actor acteth by authority.24

         Strictly interpreted, personae are "artificial persons" because

         their words and actions are owned by the users whom they

         represent, but since it is common and expedient to "forget" that

         personae are representations of users, it is possible to

         understand how a persona's actions can be interpreted as the

         persona's own.  Although Hobbes does not say specifically, he

         suggests that accountability for one's own actions is the

         consequence of acting as "owner" of the actions or with

         "authority."25  Accordingly, the expedience of "forgetting" may

         lead one to treat a persona as the author of its actions,

         thereby expecting accountability from the persona for the

         actions.  This is an unrealistic expectation, given that a

         persona is but a representation of a user who is the owner of its

         actions.  From this it follows that a user seeking to evade

         accountability for his actions might attempt to exploit the

         expedience of "forgetting" by acting through another user's

         persona.  By impostering or "impersonation," he or she can create

         a persona that appears to represent the personality and unique

         qualities of another user.  Because of the expedience of

         "forgetting" and the uncertainty regarding the degree of

         representation (transparent, translucent, or opaque) between

         users and personae, "impersonation" is a more serious violation

         of trust in Usenet than it is in the external world.  Reid

         writes, "The illegitimate use of  [personae] can cause anger on

         the part of their rightful users and sometimes deep feelings of

         guilt on the part of the perpetrators."26


         "Impersonation" is classified as an opaque representation since

         the persona is intended to represent someone other than the user

         behind it; however, not all opaque representations are

         impersonations.  A user seeking complete anonymity for personal

         privacy reasons might consider an opaque representation; however,

         a translucent representation is more common.  A translucent

         representation is typified by the user who wishes to interact via

         a pseudonym.  For the same reasons that an author would elect to

         use a pen name, a translucent representation is useful in masking

         the user's identity in certain situations.  When the user is not

         seeking to evade accountability for his or her actions, he or she

         is not "impersonating."

         To review, having established the distinctness of Usenet's

         society and its persona population, it is possible to proceed

         with a preliminary parallel to _________
                                        Leviathan.  This parallel

         establishes that personae "act or represent the words or actions"




               24Hobbes, 125.


               25Hobbes, 126.


               26Elizabeth M. Reid, "Electropolis: Communication and

         Community on Internet Relay Chat" (thesis, University of

         Melbourne, 1991), lines 1139-1141.




                                          23


         of their users.  Additionally, expedience allows one to treat a

         person's words or actions as the persona's own.  This being

         Hobbes' definition for "personation," personae are therefore the

         Usenet analogs for persons in the external world.  Further, a

         user may exploit that expedience and "impersonate" another user

         to evade the consequences of his or her actions.  Finally, this

         preliminary parallel between Usenet and _________
                                                 Leviathan clears the way

         for further analysis of the latter and the development of analogs

         within the former.






                                      The Powers

         Given the preliminary parallel between personae and Hobbes'

         "persons," it is possible to establish a further parallel between

         _________
         Leviathan and Usenet. Hobbes explains that persons possess

         certain powers.  The discussion continues with the consideration

         of these powers and development of their Usenet analogs.  On the

         subject of power, Hobbes begins,



               _______ _____
               Natural power, is the eminence of the faculties of body,

           or mind:  as extraordinary strength, form, prudence, arts,

           eloquence, liberality, nobility.  ____________
                                             Instrumental are those

           powers, which acquired by these, or by fortune, are means and

           instruments to acquire more: . . .27

         Three of these natural powers are severely limited in their

         transfer to Usenet society because Usenet personae lack physical

         form.  They are strength, form, and arts.  Obviously, physical

         strength is irrelevant in any environment devoid of physical

         things, but a Usenet persona can have strength relative to other

         personae.  In terms of Usenet, strength is one's ability to

         "execute an attack."  It will be recalled that the action of

         "attack," like all actions in Usenet, must be derived from the

         cycle of statement and response.  Therefore, "strength" in Usenet

         is one's ability to write a potent or even, vehement statement.


         The power of "form" comes from one's physical makeup.  In

         essence, it is the effect that one's appearance has on others.

         According to Hobbes, "form is power; because being a promise of

         good, it recommendeth men to the favour of women and

         strangers."28  Like "strength" it transfers poorly into Usenet

         because personae lack physical form.  Yet it has an analogous

         counterpart:  "form" in terms of Usenet, comes from the

         impression one makes on others, not with one's physique, but with

         one's words.  Even a pseudonym can convey form, as "Spartan"

         brings to mind images of frugality and warriors and "Damsel"

         connotes femininity and distress.  "Form" can extend to actual

         word choice when academic language can make a persona "appear"

         more scholarly, or when language laden with scientific jargon

         might bring to mind images of laboratory coats and measurement

         instruments.  Granted, while these images are not the clear,

         consistent images conveyed by "form" in the external world--in

         fact, they probably vary depending on the perceiver--they do

         serve to add a "face" to a name and a personality to the words.

         It is only natural to want to "fill in the blanks" that Usenet's

         analog for "form" leaves empty.

         Regarding the power of arts, Hobbes writes,






               27Hobbes, 72.


               28Hobbes, 73.



                                          25




                                          26


               Arts of public use, as fortification, making of engines,

           and other instruments of war; because they confer to defence,

           and victory, are power:  and though the true mother of them,

           be science, namely mathematics;  yet, because they are brought

           into the light, by the hand of the artificer, they be

           esteemed, the midwife passing with the vulgar for the mother,

           as his issue.29

         Since Usenet is a non-physical environment, the notion of

         "defence," like that of strength, must be derived from the cycle

         of statement and response.  Having established that "strength" in

         Usenet is one's ability to write a potent statement, then it

         follows that "arts" in Usenet, because they "confer to defence,"

         must be one's ability to write a rebuttal.


         In contrast, the powers of "prudence" and "liberality" are

         transferred to Usenet almost completely.  "Liberality" is

         intended by Hobbes to mean "generosity."  He writes,



               Also riches joined with liberality, is power; because it

           procureth friends, and servants:  without liberality, not so;

           because in this case they defend not; but expose men to envy,

           as a prey.30

         "Liberality" can be combined with things other than riches to

         produce the same effect.  Consider the act of restraining oneself

         from easily humiliating a subordinate in public or the act of

         freely and genuinely offering one's assistance to the

         uninitiated.  These acts of kindness bolster one's liberality.

         Additionally, they are actions easily transferred to written

         form.

         On the subject of prudence, Hobbes writes,



               When the thoughts of a man, that has a design in hand,

           running over a multitude of things, observes how they conduce

           to that design; or what design they may conduce unto; if his

           observations be such as are not easy, or usual, this wit of

           his is called PRUDENCE;  and depends on much experience, and

           memory of the like things, and their consequences

           heretofore.31

         Here Hobbes explains that "prudence" comes from "much experience"

         leading to "unusual observations" or insight.  A person's

         prudence transfers to his or her persona because they share one

         and the same mind and experiences, despite the fact that

         expedience may permit one to "forget" this fact.  Only when one's

         writing ability interferes with one's attempt to communicate




               29Hobbes, 73.


               30Hobbes, 72.


               31Hobbes, 61.




                                          27


         prudently does a persona seem less prudent in Usenet than the

         user does in the external world.


         Unlike the previously discussed powers, where it is clear that

         some have more exact Usenet analogs than others, the transferral

         of "nobility" to Usenet presents difficulty.  Hobbes explains,



               Nobility is power, not in all places, but only in those

           commonwealths, where it has privileges:  for in such

           privileges, consisteth their power.32

         One's privileges come from the recognition by others of one's

         rank or nobility.  Unless one conveyed one's nobility through a

         pseudonym or name such as "Dr. Oakeshott" or by the use of

         revealing information such as "My father, Senator Kennedy says .

         . . ," it is not likely that external world nobility will have

         relevance to Usenet society.  Additionally, in cases where

         external world nobility is transferred, the privileges and

         respect are not as forthcoming as expected.  Perhaps this is

         because persons of nobility, accustomed to the "trappings" of the

         elite, find that without these "trappings" in Usenet, their

         nobility is nothing more than words.  However, nobility does

         exist in Usenet.  Users such as Spafford, the frequently cited

         authority on "netiquette," seem to enjoy much deference when

         "making appearances" in Usenet.  For example, because Spafford is

         famous, other users may be less visibly critical of his

         statements while he is "present."

         "Eloquence," is possibly the most important power in Usenet.

         Hobbes probably included eloquence among the powers because it

         enables one to communicate, not only functionally, but with

         finesse.  Hobbes writes:  "Eloquence is power, because it is

         seeming prudence."33  The skill of writing enables one to have

         "a way with words" or eloquence.  Moreover, in a world where

         words are primary to existence and serve as the sole mode of

         communication and activity, their importance cannot be

         exaggerated.  In _____ ________
                          Emily Postnews, author Brad Templeton reminds

         the uninitiated user that "sloppy spelling in a purely written

         forum sends out the same silent messages that soiled clothing

         would when addressing an audience."34  On the other hand,

         actually wearing soiled clothing while accessing Usenet has

         absolutely no effect on one's persona.  The premium that Usenet

         places on spelling, and writing skills in general, inflates the

         Usenet analog for eloquence beyond its relative worth in the

         external world.





               32Hobbes, 73.


               33Hobbes, 73.


               34Brad Templeton, _____ ________
                                 Emily Postnews, compiled by Gene

         Spafford, 1991, lines 241-245.  See Appendix for complete text.




                                          28


         Hobbes discusses additional powers which rely on or operate in

         conjunction with those already considered.  Among those

         additional powers are "affability" and united power.


         The power of "affability" seems similar to that of "liberality."

         "Liberality" was described earlier with the examples of public

         restraint with subordinates and generosity with the use of one's

         powers.  Strictly speaking, these qualities of graciousness more

         accurately describe the power of "affability."  If one reviews

         Hobbes' definition of "liberality," one will notice that

         "liberality" is power when "joined" with riches.  Clearly, Hobbes

         is concerned with "riches" when he writes of "liberality" because

         "it procureth friends, and servants."  Hobbes believes that

         "liberality" or generosity with one's riches is a power because

         friends and servants contribute to one's defense.

         The external world concept of "riches" does not easily translate

         into a world without physical or material wealth, but the

         development of the analog is possible nonetheless.  In the

         external world, money is used to barter for goods and services.

         In Usenet, goods do not exist.  On the other hand, services are

         abundant:  sharing one's knowledge is a service.  Assisting a new

         user is a service.  These services may be traded in Usenet

         analogously to their trade in the external world.  Therefore, the

         Usenet analog for "riches" is "services."  This conclusion

         returns one to the original observation that "liberality" and

         "affability" appear to share the same definition. With respect to

         Usenet, indeed they do.


         Finally, the power of united power or power "united by consent"

         is described below:



               The greatest of human powers, is that which is compounded

           of the powers of most men, united by consent, in one person,

           natural, or civil, that has the use of all their powers

           depending on his will."35

         It is premature to discuss why persons would want to unite their

         powers in a single person before it has been considered why they

         would want to pursue powers for themselves.  But since Hobbes

         includes this power with the rest, it is important to note that a

         power "which is compounded of the powers of most men" is the

         "greatest of human powers."  While this may be true in the

         external world, the nature of Usenet's written medium may

         subordinate united power to the power of "eloquence," since it is

         "eloquence" which enables users to create the environment where

         unity takes place.








               35Hobbes, 72.






                                The Pursuit of Powers

         Given the discussion of Hobbes' "powers" and the development of

         their respective analogs in Usenet, it is possible to discuss and

         develop the pursuit of powers in the external world and in

         Usenet.  This will be done by examining the benefits of power,

         the need for continuous participation to retain one's powers, and

         the effect of using one's powers to confront or compete with

         another person or persona.


         With respect to the benefits of power, Hobbes writes,


               [Powers] . . . are the means and instruments to acquire

           more:  as riches, reputation, friends, and the secret working

           of God, which men call good luck.36

         The benefits of power then are riches, reputation, friends, and

         good luck.  One will discover that these benefits are in some

         instances powers themselves, and that the pursuit of power

         appears to be an end in itself.


         Riches are perhaps the most difficult of the benefits of power to

         transfer to Usenet society.  In the external world, riches are

         clear--they are the signs and objects of material wealth, such as

         money and possessions.  Given that Usenet lacks a physical

         environment, an analog for material wealth, money, or possessions

         is nonsensical.  However, it has been established that

         "services," as in sharing one's knowledge, is the analog for

         "riches."

         Reputation is significant in both the external world and Usenet.

         It is the most important benefit of power in Usenet society.

         Hobbes does not provide a simple definition with which one can

         grasp the full meaning of reputation; in fact, he defines

         reputation contextually in the definitions of other powers.

         Consider the following passage:



               Reputation of power, is power; because it draweth with it

           the adherence of those that need protection.  So is reputation

           of love of a man's country, called popularity, for the same

           reason.  Also, what quality soever maketh a man beloved, or

           feared of many; or the reputation of such quality, is power;

           because it is a means to have the assistance, and service of

           many.  Good success is power; because it maketh reputation of

           wisdom, or good fortune; which makes men either fear him; or

           rely on him. . . . Reputation of prudence in the conduct of

           peace or war, is power; because to prudent men, we commit the

           government of ourselves, more willingly than to others.37

         Broadly defined,  reputation is the publicly held estimate of

         one's worth.  With that in mind, Hobbes' definition of reputation




               36Hobbes, 72.


               37Hobbes, 72-73.



                                          32




                                          33


         in the context of other powers make more sense.  This being the

         case, reputation is the publicly held estimate of one's powers.

         For example, one may be an excellent cook known only within the

         private circle of one's friends, but once one establishes a

         reputation outside of that private circle, the estimate of one's

         excellence may be held publicly.  In this case, the power of

         one's prudence in cooking is amplified by one's reputation, and

         Hobbes tells us that in the first line of that passage when he

         says "reputation of power, is power."  It is in this sense of

         power begetting power that the importance of reputation is

         heightened in the external world.  To the extent that reputation

         is the most important power in Usenet, the following discussion

         of the Usenet analog for reputation is critical.


         In Usenet, one's powers, such as strength and eloquence, are

         expressed by participating in the cycle of statements and

         responses.  Only in this way can one's powers be perceived,

         substantiated, measured, and ranked by others.  The resulting

         comparisons made among personae establish the public estimation

         of one's worth.  This reputation-making process of comparison and

         worth is supported with the following two quotations from Hobbes:


               "Virtue generally, in all sorts of subjects, is somewhat

           that is valued for eminence; and consisteth in comparison."38


               "For let a man, as most men do, rate themselves at the

           highest value they can; yet their true value is no more, than

           it is esteemed by others."39

         Indeed, Hobbes makes it clear that reputation serves to set a

         "market price" for one's worth.  He implies that although

         reputation can amplify one's strengths, it can expose one's

         weaknesses to greater scrutiny, thereby devaluating others'

         personal estimate of those strengths.  And with respect to

         Usenet, reputation is the collective memory of the comparisons of

         past cycles of statement and response.


         Hobbes believes that the possession of friends is a benefit of

         power.  The Usenet "public" that forms one's reputation consists

         of many personae, some of which are one's friends.  During the

         cycle of the statement and response, the participants and the

         observers rate and compare the participants' expressions of their

         powers.  This comparison reveals degrees of affinities among

         personae, that is, they may "take sides" on an issue.  These

         affinities are guided by what is described by Hobbes as

         passions,40 which include but are not limited to appetite,





               38Hobbes, 59.


               39Hobbes, 73.


               40Hobbes, 47.




                                          34


         desire, love, aversion, hate, joy, and grief.41  Those personae

         whose passions move them together out of common affinity become

         friends, supporters, and allies.  Those whose passions

         disassociate them may become enemies.  A persona's friends enable

         it to establish and build its reputation, thereby increasing its

         power, whereas its enemies seek to discredit it, thereby reducing

         its power.  There is no inherent quality such as "good" or "evil"

         that distinguishes one's friends from one's enemies; what is

         knowable is only that the former seek to support and increase

         one's power, and the latter seek its attenuation.


          The benefit of power known as "luck" describes one's ability to

         "know the secret working of God."  Certainly Hobbes does not mean

         direct knowledge of God, but he does want to acknowledge the

         power of those who tend to draw "stronger hands" than others.

         The most important analog for luck in Usenet is one's ability to

         draw friends.  While it is true that one's friends come from

         those who observe one's actions, luck guides one to act

         fortuitously in places likely to attract many and the most

         reliable of them.

         In order to acquire the benefits of power, it is necessary to

         continuously participate in the cycle of statement and response.

         Although reputation is a benefit of power and a power, because it

         amplifies the other powers, the duration of that effect becomes

         important.  If one's reputation is held by the public in

         collective memory, it follows that one's reputation is

         recalculated after each participation, with the readjusted

         reputation replacing the older reputation in the collective

         memory.  Thus one's reputation lasts until it is forgotten.  As

         one's reputation fades from memory, so fades one's power.

         However, to fade completely violates the condition of existence

         for continuous participation; therefore, to avoid the fading of

         one's power and the cessation of existence, one must continuously

         participate in the cycle of statement and response.


         To summarize, the objects or benefits of power are riches,

         reputation, friends, and luck.  Of these benefits, reputation is

         the most important in Usenet because it is a benefit of power and

         a power in itself.  It enables one to increase one's power by

         amplifying beyond the private circle into the public arena.  By

         subjecting one's powers to perception, substantialization,

         comparison, and rating, reputation is created by participating in

         the cycle of statement and response.  Reputation sets the "fair

         market" value for one's worth which may be higher or lower than

         one's own estimation.  Reputation is stored in the collective

         memory of past participation in the cycle of statement and

         response.  And finally, the duration of one's reputation depends

         upon one's continuous participation in the cycle of statement and

         response.





               41Hobbes, 50.






                                        Death

         Where previously, the definition of power, its benefits and their

         Usenet analogs have been discussed, it is possible to explore in

         terms of Usenet, the pursuit of power, the notion of "death," and

         the competition for powers.


         The possession of certain benefits of power, such as reputation,

         is power in itself; however, possession of power alone seems not

         to be enough.  In revisiting the following passage on power, it

         is important to focus on Hobbes' use of "more:"


               [Powers] . . . are the means and instruments to acquire

           more:  as riches, reputation, friends, and the secret working

           of God, which men call good luck.42

           Hobbes does not say, for example, that powers are the means to

         acquire riches, reputation, friends and good luck.  He says that

         powers are the means to acquire "more."  This suggests that

         Hobbes believes that the simple acquisition of powers is not

         enough.  In fact, it is clear from the following passage that

         there is no limit as to how much can be acquired:



               And the cause of this, is not always that a man hopes for

           more intensive delight, than he has already attained to; or

           that he cannot be content with a moderate power:  but because

           he cannot assure the power and means to live well, which he

           hath present, without the acquisition of more.43

         As can be seen, the acquisition of "more" assures one's present

         power and "means to live well."  This implies an active life of

         acquisition, not a leisurely life where one waits for power to

         come to him or her.  Hobbes is saying that if one wants the

         assurance of one's "present means to live well," one must acquire

         "more."  Hobbes is very clear on this point when he uses the word

         "restless" in the following passage.  Note that "restless" should

         not be interpreted  as "fidgety," but rather, more literally as

         "without rest":


               So that in the first place, I put for a general

           inclination of all mankind, a perpetual and restless desire of

           power after power, that ceaseth only in death.44

         This indictment of "mankind" clears the way for a discussion of

         "death."  According to Hobbes, death in the external world is the

         cessation of all movement, for men consist of a complex

         combination of motions ranging from one's limbs to one's






               42Hobbes, 72.


               43Hobbes, 80.


               44Hobbes, 80.



                                          37




                                          38


         dreams.45  These motions, "begun in generation, and continued

         without interruption through their whole life"46 distinguish the

         living from the not.


         The Usenet analog for life is also derived from motions, the

         motion of the cycle of statement and response, and it is

         predicated upon the satisfaction of the three conditions for a

         Usenet persona's existence:  enough utility to assure the

         continued association between the user and the persona, the

         visible demonstration of one's presence via a persona, and

         continuous participation in the cycle of statement and response.

         Without the satisfaction of these conditions, a persona cannot

         exist.  It is clear from the conditions that utility and

         participation are essential:  Usenet must remain useful to the

         user and the user must continuously assert the existence of his

         or her persona by participating in the cycle of statement and

         response.

         The effect of participation in this cycle is the creation and

         development of one's reputation.  Those personae whose

         reputations are highly valued attract a sufficient number of

         responses with which to perpetuate additional cycles for

         statement and response.  Those personae with poorly valued

         reputations may at first generate an intense cycle based on

         criticism of another and defense, but often come to be ignored

         and forced to face exclusion, obscurity, and thereby "death."

         For example,  well-regarded personae only need to participate

         occasionally to insure that they are not forgotten, because the

         resultant cycle of statement and response will generate enough

         interest to maintain their reputations, and thereby their

         existence.  It is also possible that little known personae may

         establish temporary notoriety for themselves by making outrageous

         statements before returning to obscurity after their cycle has

         run its course.


         By far, the great majority of personae enjoy neither fame nor

         ignominy, for their participation merely consists of "skirmishes"

         and banter.  To illustrate this case, it is common for one to

         state an opinion, draw criticism, and rebut it.  The participants

         in this short cycle are then compared, rated, and their

         respective reputations adjusted in the collective memory.  But

         consider the case where one is subjected to an undue amount of

         criticism.  If the "assault" is without merit, as in the second

         illustration, one may choose to ignore it; but if the criticism

         is based on truth, one may feel compelled to defend his or her

         reputation.  Hobbes explains this compulsion as a "right" when he

         says,


               THE RIGHT OF NATURE, which writers commonly call ___
                                                                jus




               45Hobbes, 23-27.


               46Hobbes, 47.




                                          39


           ________
           naturale, is the liberty each man hath, to use his own power,

           as he will himself, for the preservation of his own nature;

           that is to say, of his own life; and consequently, of doing

           any thing, which in his own judgment, and reason, he shall

           conceive to be the aptest means thereunto.47

         As it has been shown, reputation is the "tote board" of a

         persona's existence within Usenet; therefore, to defend one's

         reputation is to exercise one's natural right to self-

         preservation in Usenet.  But even relatively minor "skirmishes"

         can lead to larger "battles," because the drive to acquire "more"

         can accelerate the cycle of statement and response into a

         reputation-making machine.    Consider the effect of the

         "perpetual and restless desire of power after power" and the

         lengths that Hobbes believes a person will go to assure the

         acquisition of "more."  In Usenet, the analog for an attack

         designed for quick reputational gain is called a "flame."

         Perhaps named for their inflammatory nature, "flames" tend to be

         ad hominem, argumentative, and often have little to do with the

         original discussions in which they develop.  The extremely

         personal nature of "flames" often draws one to respond

         reflexively with a statement even more insulting or offensive

         than the original.  Again, the motivation to participate in such

         an exchange is to publicly defend one's reputation.  A cycle

         containing ad hominem exchanges can gain momentum very quickly,

         attracting outside attention to its participants.  As the number

         of observers increases, the reputational stakes of the

         participants increase.  This has the effect of luring some of the

         observers from the "sidelines" into the cycle as well, causing

         the spread of the"war."  Sometimes compared to "storms," because

         they appear without warning, wreak havoc, and subside just as

         unpredictably, "flame wars" can start over spelling, grammar,

         semantics, or any seemingly trivial issue.


         Since "flame wars" can dominate or otherwise interfere with the

         discussion of non-participants, the "wars" tend to diminish the

         utility of Usenet to those non-participants.  Since utility is

         among the conditions of existence within Usenet, if enough non-

         participants feel the utility of their participation in Usenet is

         substantially threatened by a "flame war," the warring

         participants have nothing to gain reputationally and much to

         lose.  In fact, once a "flame war" loses its audience, the

         participants not only lose those who would judge and compare

         their actions, but more importantly, a war offensive, annoying,

         or useless enough to drive away its observers will probably cause

         a net loss to the reputations of its participants.

         Although "flame wars" are generally discouraged because they are

         so disruptive, they persist, and are commonly found in newsgroups

         oriented toward social issues and controversy.  However, the

         relatively sedate technical discussion newsgroups have their

         share.  The notoriously disruptive, and futile, cycle of "Macs




               47Hobbes, 103.




                                          40


         are better than PCs" is a recurring "flame war" which many users

         try to extinguish as quickly as it begins, by refusing to

         participate.  It should be noted that a special newsgroup,

         "alt.flame," exists for the specific purpose of being a place

         where one can participate in a "flame war" without being

         disruptive to the discussions in the rest of the newsgroups, a

         sort of "O.K. Corral."  It is common to see someone write, "Let's

         take this discussion to alt.flame."


         The following passage from _________
                                    Leviathan may shed light on why

         "flaming" and contention in general occurs:


               ____ __ __________ ____ ___________
               Love of contention from competition.  Competition of

           riches, honour, command, or other power, inclineth to

           contention, enmity, and war:  because the way of one

           competitor, to the attaining of his desire, is to kill,

           subdue, supplant, or repel the other.48

         In the preceding passage, Hobbes suggests that persons engage in

         lethal competition in order to acquire powers and their benefits.

         In terms of Usenet, "flaming" allows them to increase their

         reputations at the expense of others.


         In summary, it is clear that personae must restlessly participate

         in the cycle of statement and response, which is primary to their

         existence within Usenet and which allows them to acquire more

         powers, as in reputation.  It is also understood that such

         continuous participation, especially that of "flaming," is

         contentious and that one's reputation is subject to damage.  The

         question remains, how contentious can the Usenet environment for

         participation become, before the conditions to maintain the

         existence of one's persona become so difficult to meet that one

         is driven to surrender his or her powers to a single authority?






















               48Hobbes, 81.






                                 Living in Moderation

         This section includes a discussion of an actual Usenet example of

         the cycle of statement and response, the alternatives to the

         outright surrender of one's powers, and the submission to

         moderation.  The following series of articles are messages from a

         Usenet newsgroup oriented towards the discussion of evil.  Topics

         in the newsgroup drift between "tales from the dark side"49 to

         the plotting of murder.  This example is the beginning portion of

         a cycle of statement and response involving five personae

         discussing the fate of one of their teaching assistants and the

         moral and legal implications of the discussion itself.  The

         personae are "Paul" from the University of Maryland at College

         Park, a user at Youngstown State University,  a user at Malaspina

         College,"Jon" from Netcom Online Communications Services, and a

         user at the University of Maine.  All articles are included in

         their entirety without editing to preserve the "realism" of the

         discussion.  Paul writes,



               With one single, simple, trivial, insignificant event, my

           life has been thrown into utter chaos.

               I'm graduating this semester, or was. My TA insists I did

           not turn in a significant amount of assignments for her class.

           This is incorrect, and I have no way of proving it to her. As

           such, see [___
                      sic] is giving me an F. Despite the large amount of

           work I did, and my good test grades, she will not even

           consider a D.  Mind you this is an insignificant little one

           credit Physical Education course. I explained that I had no

           money to take a course during the summer ($300), was leaving

           in the summer for Ca., was on my way to grad school, and that

           this little incident was really fucking up my life. She

           proceeded to give me, while power-tripping and in an

           authoritative manner, the 'real world and responsibility'

           speech. As though this fucking class and this little blonde

           puke were representative of the real world. Needless to say, I

           am irate.

               What I would like from you are suggestions to make her

           life a living hell. I considered killing her, or driving by

           her house with an uzi, but I don't want to go to jail, at

           least not over her. Any suggestions from the subtle to

           extravagant will be considered. Nothing she could easily trace

           me to.

               I anxiously await your response.....

         Paul is apparently disappointed with his poor grade, but it is

         never clear whether he actually intends to act on the advice he

         solicits or whether he is simply attempting to gain sympathy from

         others by sharing his plight.  His first response arrives from

         the University of Maryland user.  It will be recalled that this

         response satisfies Paul's conditions for existence--it proves




               49John Gilmore, ___________ _________ ____________ ____ _
                               Alternative Newsgroup Hierarchies, Part I,

         edited by Gene Spafford, 1992, line 147.



                                          43




                                          44


         that he is not isolated and alone:



               Heh... I'm starting to like this gal.  She must really

           like watching you squirm.  Heh.  You could post her name,

           address, etc so every horny geek can give her a call.  A

           slight description, so they can pretend that they know her

           well... scare the hell out of her.  My guess, though, is that

           she'd like it too much.  Ah well...

               Don't you see it??????  Come on, man... it *IS*

           representative of the whole world.  You are getting dicked

           over in a way you never ever expected!!  Some small

           "insignifigant" person is ruining your life. You better learn

           fast... or you are not going to fare well at all.

               Why are you so worried about her misery being traced to

           you?  She doesn't mind that *you* know how very screwed you

           are.  *SHE* doesn't mind telling you *to your face* exactly

           how she is going to do it.  Illegal is bad...yep.  Proof  is

           tricky... but avoidable.  I suggest printing this out,

           (assuming you save it), and deleting it immediately.

               Okay... right now I'm more on her side than yours... but

           since you asked....

               Two words:  Sexual Harrasment.

               Just as difficult to prove/disprove as the homework issue.

           Just as likely to ruin her life.  I mean... how would you like

           to be the girl who was *so* desperate to find a date, she was

           blackmailing her student?  Heh.

               No offence to you... but this works even better if you are

           unattractive.

               :)

               Actually... this may even be what she is trying to do...

           how do *I* know?  You said you handed the HW in, right?

           Okay... so she "lost" it.  Maybe she wants something in return

           for "finding" the homework.  Start telling all your friends

           how she keeps coming on to you, and got really pissed when you

           turned her down... and that she hinted that she would ruin

           your grade if you didn't play along.  About this time, you

           want to start recording conversations with this babe... keep

           saying that you are *desperate* to do well in this class...

           you'd do *anything* to make up for it... what could you do?

           You, obviously, may want to edit out these portions of the

           conversation.  :)  See what responce you get.  Ask her out.

           Bring sex into the conversation.  Go back, now, and mention to

           your friends that she *really is* going to ruin your grade

           since you didn't play along.  Get really upset.  Become

           hysterical... say that you don't really care and that you'll

           go ahead and do what she wants... you just want to graduate.

           Call her with someone in the room.  Assuming that she didn't

           want you to trade affection for your grade... I'n sitll not

           ruling this out as a possibility... she will most probably

           turn you down quite loudly.  Your friend may even overhear

           this if she is *really* loud.  As some of your friends to help

           decide what you should do.  Eventually, this will come to

           someone's attention... etc.  If things don't look good, keep




                                          45


           telling the school authorities that you are going to take the

           matter to a more public setting if they don't fix things with

           your grade.  This usually makes them jump.  Even if she

           doesn't get in trouble... you should most certainly get your

           grade.  Depending on how well you play it... you might even

           get to make $$$ writing about it... touring... etc.  Don't

           make up dates and times that you cannot account for her

           location.  If you say she was harassing you and she was with

           30 people playing nude twister... your story is shot to hell.

           Write stuff down, and memorize it.

               Ok.  You have the tools... it all depends on how well you

           play it

               ....Send me a copy of your book.

               Take Care.

         Note the tone of the Maryland user's response.  At first he or

         she mocks Paul by "siding" with the teaching assistant, but

         eventually the user describes a plan of action.  Also note that

         the user has to resort to non-standard punctuation,

         capitalization, and asterisks to convey emphasis since the

         traditional non-verbal methods of controlling voice pitch and

         volume are unavailable.  There is even the presence of emoticons

         to indicate that the user is smiling at those points in the

         response.  But again, it is still uncertain whether this user

         expects his or her advice to be taken seriously or whether the

         exchange is merely an exercise to help Paul vent his frustration.


         The next response to Paul's statement comes from Youngstown State

         University.  Generally, only two personae are needed to

         substantiate one another's existences, but in this case, this

         third user from Youngstown, rather  than Paul, serves to

         substantiate the existence of the Maryland user:


               If by some chance, you can get her address & soc. security

           number, I have heard that a really effective harassment goes

           like this:

                Call the I.R.S.

               Say, "I'm (name of TA ), and I think I made a mistake on

           my 1040,       could you check your records?"

               Supply address & social, if asked for them.

               With luck, she gets audited.

               Probably kinder to just shoot her.

         This response clearly contains more humor than the previous two,

         provided that one agrees that death is preferable to a tax audit,

         but it is still difficult to tell whether or not this is a

         harmless, but "dark" discussion or a conspiracy to commit a

         felony.  The fourth participant, a user from Malaspina College is

         apparently not amused when he or she writes,



               Please consider the implications of this conversation.

           This is an extrordinarily offensive and demeaning exchange

           with possible legal implications. Your conversations

           contribute to the oppression of women and completely undermine

           the human values you profess to acquire at college. Remember




                                          46


           that your commentari}iesare read by many people throughout the

           world and reflect not only on you, but on the institutions you

           represent.  All of us in the college and university community

           have a strong personal responsibility to ensure that our

           colleagues--women in particular--are protected from abusive,

           offensive, demeaning, belittling, harrassing, and threatening

           language. There is NO EXCUSE for this exchange in any

           conference.  Fourteen women in Montreal were massacrd 2 years

           ago by a man whose ideas reflected the same crap you are

           exchanging. I am profoundly disturbed and ashamed that people

           who profess intellectual skills will engage in this kind of

           hate exchange. I am new to conference activity but fully

           intend to do whatever is necessary to protect my colleagues

           from thissort of abuse.

         This user is risking confrontation by "scolding" and attempting

         to shame the other users for their actions.  Despite the name of

         the current newsgroup, alt.evil, this user is convinced that this

         discussion has no place in "any conference." In the terms of this

         study, this user is "attacking" the reputations of the other

         three.  The first user to respond to the "attack" is Jon from

         Netcom:



               Who died and appointed you net.cop?

               What a joke!  You could easily argue that this TA's

           actions contribute to the oppression of men.  Further, as to

           the "values" one acquires at college, this is bullshit.  The

           only "values" most people learn at college is what case of

           beer is cheapest, or how best to make money.

               Pahleeezee.  I think you give it more importance than it

           has.  Especially in this newsgroup, which exists to promote

           and discuss evil.  Not social responsibility.  There are news

           groups for that purpose.  Just look.  You would probably be

           happier there.  Sorry, but this group is not going to mutate

           into alt.fuzzy.warm.feeling.inside because it bothers you.

               Don't you get it?  *This is alt.evil*.  It is a newsgroup,

           not a conference.  It is not about social responsibility.

               Good luck, idiot.  Have you ever heard of *Freedom of

           Speech?*  You are clearly living in a fantasy world, and

           appear to believe you somehow are powerful.  Ha Ha Ha.  What a

           shit head you are.

         Note that Jon's first sentence, "Who died and appointed you

         net.cop?" is extremely sarcastic and rhetorical.  Its intent is

         not to elicit a truthful response, but to embarass the Malaspina

         College user for assuming an authoritative role.  Jon then

         proceeds to return the "attack" by questioning the validity of

         the values acquired at college.  This tactic actually pits Jon's

         "prudence" in college experience against that of the user from

         Malaspina, and may actually have more of a bearing on the

         calculation of his reputation than everything else that he says.

         After this point, his response quickly becomes an ad hominem

         attack, mocking the Malaspina user and calling him names.  This

         message is an example of a "flame," and as such, it is

         interesting to observe that aside from the first sentence, it




                                          47


         does not specifically have anything to do with Paul's original

         statement.


         The fifth and final user in this example is from the University

         of Maine:


               No moralizing on who's right or wrong, we are talking

           about evil not ethics.  sugar in the gas tank should

           crystalize in the fuel lines, or use sand and ruin the engine,

           figure a way to give her lice (there's a# of varieties esp.

           pubic) or plant drugs on her etc. If you or any of your I.M.F.

           team are captured thesecretary will disavow any knowledge of

           your actions. -HAVE FUN

         Again, note the humorous tone.  Given that all of the responses

         had elements of humor, it is entirely possible that the Malaspina

         College user violated an alt.evil norm by dispelling their

         fantasy plot.  The Malaspina user also may not have "picked up"

         on the humor given the interference of the medium and the

         inadequacies of emoticons and other devices to convey non-verbal

         information.  Of particular interest in this last message is the

         opening sentence, ". . . we are talking about evil not ethics."

         By stating the purpose of the cycle and the newsgroup, this user

         effectively pits his "prudence" in alt.evil interaction against

         the previous two users'; and by immediately returning to the

         topic at hand with the remainder of his message, this user is

         attempting to extinguish the disruptive "flames."


         It will be recalled that these articles are only the first five

         in a cycle of statement and response.  It should also be noted

         that the number of observers of this cycle, if any, is unknown,

         but that this figure is estimated to be five times the number of

         participants.50  At the conclusion of each statement or response,

         the participants and the observers privately estimate the worth

         of each participant:  the sum of that worth, held in the

         collective memory, is their reputation.

         Given this detailed discussion of the cycle of statement and

         response, it is useful to recall the remaining question:  how

         contentious can the Usenet environment for participation become,

         before the conditions to maintain the existence of one's persona

         become so difficult to meet, that one is driven to surrender his

         powers to a single authority?  The following discussion prepares

         one to answer by first considering the alternatives to the

         outright surrender of one's powers.  For this purpose the

         following passage from _________
                                Leviathan is useful:



               _____ _________ ____ ____ __ _____  ____ ____ __ ______ __
               Civil obedience from love of ease.  From fear of death, or

           ______
           wounds.  Desire of ease, and sensual delight, disposeth men to




               50Brian, Reid, ______ __________ _______
                              Usenet Readership Summary (Palo Alto,

         California:  Network Measurement Project at the DEC Western

         Research Laboratory, March 1992), lines 22-28.  See Appendix.




                                          48


           obey a common power:  because by such desires, a man doth

           abandon the protection that might be hoped for from his own

           industry, and labour.  Fear of death, and wounds, disposeth to

           the same; and for the same reason.51

         From this passage it is clear that Hobbes recognizes that the

         rest-less "pursuit of power after power" takes its toll on

         persons who are as inclined to ease as they are to contention.

         The balance between these opposing desires appears to be the

         "fear of death, and wounds."  It follows then, that it is the

         fear of death and wounds that persuades persons to abandon their

         pursuit of powers and surrender themselves to the power of

         another.  This notion is apparent in Usenet, but it appears that

         there are other alternatives short of complete surrender.  As

         discussed, one may ignore a user who interferes with the utility

         of one's access to Usenet.  Additionally, to solve disputes and

         facilitate the interaction, one may voluntarily adhere to the

         general principles described as "netiquette" as outlined by

         Spafford.  Next to be discussed is an actual example from Usenet

         which invokes Spafford's guidelines and the practice of using

         "kill files" to systematically ignore disruptive users.


         It will be recalled that Gene Spafford compiles and distributes a

         series of guidelines designed to facilitate the smooth

         interaction between Usenet participants, but since there is no

         Usenet government to enforce them, the guidelines remain

         informal.  Nonetheless, many individuals voluntarily abide by

         them and insist that others do the same.  In the following

         example, "David" attempts to persuade "Bill" to use some self-

         restraint and conform to Spafford's guidelines:


               Why don't you respond in private mail, and ask the person

           you are sending to to summarize. This prevents clutter, which

           this posting is as well. If everyone posted a response to

           every PC related hardware question they saw, this newsgroup

           would quickly become too bulky to work with.

         In this article, David is responding to an earlier message of

         Bill's.  Apparently, Bill had previously responded publicly to

         someone else's question.  In all likelihood, the question was a

         common one and Bill's response was a common answer.  Tired of

         seeing both "frequently asked questions" and their responses,

         David asks Bill in this article to observe the Usenet "courtesy"

         of responding to such questions in private.  It should be noted

         that David is relying on the following section from Spafford's

         guidelines:



               One of the biggest problems we have on the network is that

           when someone asks a question, many people send out identical

           answers.  When this happens, dozens of identical answers pour

           through the net.  Mail your answer to the person and suggest




               51Hobbes, 81.




                                          49


           that they summarize to the network.  This way the net will

           only see a single copy of the answers, no matter how many

           people answer the question.52

         In Bill's response to David, "IMHO" is the common abbreviation

         for "in my humble opinion":



               My understanding is that these groups are for the

           unfettered exchange of  information. IMHO, too much band-width

           is used attempting to restrict use of the NET. I, for one,

           like to read like the answers. It's a lot easier for everyone

           than E-mailing the posters and asking them to share

           individually. Lot of recipients of NET-knowledge do NOT take

           the extra effort to summarize. It's easy enough to ignore

           threads which have nothing to offer. We're a divers bunch..

           one person's "clutter" may be another's insight. There are

           first-timer joining these groups every day. Remember our

           roots. I have no problem with FAQ being FAQs. (Frequently

           Asked Questions being Frequently Answered Questions)

         Obviously Bill opts to ignore Spafford's guidelines and runs the

         risk of being ignored by those he annoys with his "clutter."

         Concerned that already too much time has been spent discussing

         the issue, David replies,



               I suggest this is way off the topic of comp.sys.ibm.pc, if

           we really have to continue this discussion let's finish it in

           email.


         David could be right.  "comp.sys.ibm.pc" is a technical newsgroup

         for the discussion of IBM personal computers.  Participants

         receive hundreds of messages daily and very few have the patience

         for non-technical discussions in the newsgroup such as Bill's and

         David's.  It is very likely that both Bill and David are already

         being ignored.


         Sometimes the situation arises where a user will offend or annoy

         another so severely that simply ignoring the user runs the risk

         of  encountering him and being offended and annoyed at a later

         date.  To remedy this situation, Usenet users have at their

         disposal a utility known as a "kill file."  Basically an

         electronic filter, a "kill file" allows a user to screen out or

         block the message of another user.  A "kill file" can contain the

         names of several users and sites, as well as offensive words,

         effectively preventing the display of potentially unwanted

         messages.  Note that a "kill file" does not actually destroy

         Usenet articles, but merely shields the owner of the file from

         their existence.  "Kill files" are an extreme method of self-

         censoring because they take the power of decision away from the

         "kill file" owner.  Many users still prefer to run the risk of




               52Von Rospach, lines 176-181.




                                          50


         re-encountering annoyances than to subjugate themselves to an

         automatic censor; however, the following example of gratuitous

         "flaming" makes the originator of the statement a prime candidate

         for countless "kill files" within reading range of the message:



               WHAT?!?!?! You deleted the FUCKING expletives you PUSSY-

           STARVED DICKSUCKING BASTARD? What the FUCK kind of newsgroup

           do you think this is?

               This aint FUCKING rec.tv.family-channel.

               Leave the FUCKING expletives in, it annoys the SHIT out of

           me when ASSHOLES [do that] . . .

         However, the threat of "kill files" do not necessarily prevent or

         curb disruptive behavior.  Mark from Denver illustrates this:


               So put me in your kill-file, dac.  Simple solution.  What

           makes you think I give a hoot about *what* you think of my

           writing?  I post for my own enjoyment.

               Not yours.  Live with it.

         Of course, Mark should probably think twice about such a

         challenge if his name begins to appear in too many "kill files."


          As the amount of clutter or "noise"53 increases, more and more

         users voluntarily submit to "moderation."  A moderated newsgroup

         prevents unapproved statements from being distributed.  All

         statements are submitted to a moderator who screens the messages

         for content, posts the appropriate ones, and rejects the ones he

         feels are unfit for the discussion.  In the case of a moderated

         newsgroup, the moderator has tremendous control of one's network

         existence.

         The price or reward for such restraint is the decrease of noise

         and the increase of relevant information.  Moderated newsgroups

         are not without problems and as David reminds us, "one person's

         'clutter' may be another's insight."  Additionally, the degree of

         censorship varies from moderator to moderator.  In the case of

         "comp.dcom.telecom," a moderated newsgroup dedicated to

         telecommunications issues, many individuals are unable to

         tolerate its highly-opinionated moderator, Patrick Townson.  As a

         result, they have created an alternative or unrestricted

         newsgroup called "alt.dcom.telecom."  To this day Pat's group

         remains very popular while the much smaller alternative group is

         commonly cluttered with articles critical of  him.  This offers

         little choice for users who desire the volume of messages in the

         moderated group, but deplore Pat's degree of restraint.


         To summarize this section of the discussion, the maintenance of

         the existence of a persona requires users to continuously

         participate in the cycle of statement and response.  As a result



               53The commonly used term for "clutter,"  which comes from

         the technical phrase "signal-to-noise ratio," which basically

         means that the less interference there is, the cleaner the signal

         will be.




                                          51


         of this participation, the users both establish or maintain their

         persona's reputation and benefits from the utility of Usenet.  As

         a matter of participation, the users may receive challenges to

         their statements or "actions" and may also challenge the

         statements or "actions" of others.  In rare cases, they may

         participate in or observe a cycle that generates "flames" or

         escalates into a "flame war."  This sort of message and other

         messages they find personally uninteresting, offensive, or

         annoying decreases the utility of Usenet for them and threatens

         the existence of their persona.  To protect themselves from this

         threat, they have the alternatives of ignoring the offensive

         articles, requesting that offensive users conform to

         "netiquette," "killing" the offensive users by placing them in

         their "kill file," or participating in a moderated newsgroup.






                              Looking for the Leviathan

         It has been established that in a contentious environment,

         offensive or uninteresting articles may diminish Usenet's utility

         to its users.  As a result, users may opt to restrict their

         participation to the moderation of another user.  In terms of

         Usenet, too many attacks and disruptive actions by other personae

         threaten their existence to the point that they may consider

         surrendering themselves to the control of another persona.  It is

         on this level, the level of the personae, that Hobbes' _________
                                                                Leviathan

         operates.  The following discussion describes and analyzes a

         random survey of the participation within Usenet and the degree

         to which the participation is moderated.


         If one were to search for a Leviathan in Usenet, one would

         obviously begin with the moderated newsgroups because the

         discussions therein consist of articles previously approved by a

         "common power."  However, there are other less obvious

         indications of restraint such as conformity to or compliance with

         "netiquette" as a general guide to behavior; and conformity to or

         compliance with Spafford's more specific set of guidelines.

         A survey was conducted on a randomly selected sample of two

         hundred Usenet articles.  The articles were selected from a list

         of 3,971 existing newsgroups with each group having equal chances

         for selection.  A computer program was written to randomly select

         a newsgroup from the list from which it randomly selected an

         article.  The selected article became part of the sample

         population.  If the newsgroup did not contain any articles, the

         computer program selected another newsgroup until the sample

         population was equal to two hundred.


         After the sample population was determined, each article was

         examined for signs or indication of a Leviathan.  These

         indicators were operationalized as "Leviathan Factors" with each

         increase in factor representing a greater sign or indication of

         coercion.  The "Leviathan Factors" (LF) are described as follows:



         Leviathan Factor       Description


















                                          55




                                          56


                   0         No signs of coercion to conform or

                             self-restraint.


                   1         Unmindful conformity to/compliance

                             with "netiquette" such as the use of

                             "emoticons" or other characters to

                             convey physical actions.

                   2         Reference to "netiquette" as means of

                             conformity/compliance.


                   3         Reference to Spafford's guidelines.

                             More specific than LF 2.


                   4         Article is from a moderated newsgroup

                             or is otherwise censored.


                     Table 1.  The operationalization of Leviathan

         The factors are at the ordinal level of measurement such that LF

         4 means "more Leviathan" than LF 3, but it does not mean than LF

         2 represents twice as much as LF 1.  Given the operationalization

         of Leviathan as "Leviathan Factors," it was possible to read each

         article and ask:  Does this article contain any signs of coercion

         to obey a common power?  If an article contained more than one

         indicator, then it was coded with the greatest LF for which it

         satisfied the requirements.  The findings help one to conclude

         "how much" of a Leviathan is present in Usenet.  A survey of the

         sample population produced the following figures shown in Table

         2,



                          LF          Frequency     Percentage


                           0             162           81.0


                           1             14             7.0

                           2              3             1.5


                           3              2             1.0

                           4             19             9.5


                         Total           200           100.0



             Table 2.  Articles containing progressive signs of Leviathan

         Based on the data, 9.5% of the articles surveyed showed the

         greatest amount of Leviathan (LF 4), and 81% showed no signs of

         Leviathan (LF 0).  It was expected that there would be

         progressively fewer articles with each increasing factor of

         Leviathan, but the unusual distribution for LF 1-3 suggests

         possible operationalization problems.  In retrospect, it was not

         correct to identify "emoticons" as a form of Leviathan because

         they are signs of compensation for the medium of written

         communication and not necessarily signs of compliance to or

         conformity with "netiquette."  The unexpectedly high number of




                                          57


         observations coded LF 1 bear this out.  Additionally, the sample

         size did not support a five-way breakdown with any degree of

         accuracy between the extremes of LF 0 and LF 4.  This resulted in

         a negligible difference between the number of observations coded

         LF 2 and LF 3 from which a meaningful conclusion can be drawn.

         In order to account for operationalization and sample size

         problems, the data can be presented in Table 3 in a way to

         emphasize the measured extremes.


                  LF               Frequency          Percentage

                  0-1                 176                 88


                  2-4                 24                  12


                 Total                200                 100


                    Table 3.  Articles showing signs of a Leviathan

         Presented in this way, the articles are divided into two

         consolidated categories.  The first category, LF 0-1, consists of

         articles with no measured signs of a Leviathan, including

         "emoticons" which are indicators of compensation and not

         coercion.  The second category, LF 2-4, consists of articles

         which do contain signs of a Leviathan.  This category describes

         the range of articles including those in which someone asks

         another to observe "netiquette" to articles submitted under

         moderation.  Based on the findings, some measure of Leviathan is

         present in 12% of the articles surveyed.






                                      Conclusion

         The conclusion consists of a summary of the major points, a

         discussion of the quantitative study, and a consideration of the

         avenues for research.


         This study has sought to establish seven major points.  First,

         Usenet is a distinct society because the exclusively, written

         medium keeps much of the three-dimensional, external world out.

         Second, personae are created by the interaction of Usenet users.

         A user always interacts with the personae of other users because

         it is impossible to interact ___________________
                                      three-dimensionally via a written

         medium.  This always being the case, expediency allows one to

         "forget" that interaction is via personae.  Third, Hobbes helps

         prove that personae are persons within Usenet.  Fourth, like

         persons, personae have powers, although they may be different.

         Fifth, users participate in Usenet to maximize its utility, thus

         persona existence is tied to user participation and utility.

         Sixth, participation may become contentious or uninteresting,

         thereby decreasing Usenet's utility and threatening personae

         existence; however, users can increasingly subject their

         participation to restraint.  Seventh, to maximize Usenet's

         utility and to maintain personae existence, some users may decide

         to allow another person to control or moderate the extent of

         their participation, thus controlling or moderating the existence

         of their personae.

         The following is a review of each point:


         1.   ______ __ _ ________ _______ _______ ___ ____________
              Usenet is a distinct society because the exclusively,

         _______ ______ _____ ____ __ ___ __________________ ________
         written medium keeps much of the three-dimensional, external

         _____ ____
         world out.  With the help of Elizabeth Reid's work, it has been

         established that the written medium of Usenet "filters" or

         interferes with communication among users.  The effect of this

         interference is the "deprivation of the subtleties" of verbal and

         non-verbal communication.  Reid's research suggests that such

         subtleties reinforce the standards of behavior in the external

         world.  Without that reinforcement, Usenet users have had to

         develop "alternate or parallel" standards of behavior such as

         "netiquette" and Gene Spafford's guidelines.  This compensation

         for the shortcomings of the medium plus the development of new

         written language subtleties known as "emoticons" has enabled

         Usenet to become a society distinct from that of the external

         world.

         2.   ________ ___ _______ __ ___ ___________ __ ______ ______  _
              Personae are created by the interaction of Usenet users.  A

         ____ ______ _________ ____ ___ ________ __ _____ _____ _______ __
         user always interacts with the personae of other users because it

         __ __________ __ ________ ___________________ ___ _ _______
         is impossible to interact three-dimensionally via a written

         _______  ____ ______ _____ ___ _____ __________ ______ ___ __
         medium.  This always being the case, expediency allows one to

         ________ ____ ___________ __ ___ _________
         "forget" that interaction is via personae.  This is perhaps the

         most difficult point to establish because it relies upon the

         notion of "persona."  Furthermore, it is the most critical point,

         because it is on the level of the personae, not the users, upon

         which Hobbes' _________
                       Leviathan operates.


         To review the notion of "persona," one must understand the

         perspective of the user.  From the user's standpoint, he or she


                                          59




                                          60


         accesses Usenet because it satisfies some personal need that is,

         it has utility.  During the course of accessing, the user may

         decide that writing an article, rather than exclusively reading,

         will increase Usenet's utility.  When the user drafts the article

         it is probable that he or she has one or more recipient users in

         mind.  It is here that the notion of "persona" arises.  If the

         user thought about what information was used to create the

         "image" of the recipient in mind, the user would discover that

         surprisingly little is actually known.  Yet, gender, stature,

         appearance, intelligence, and other characteristics are somehow

         attributed, sight unseen, to the recipient user.  This is only

         natural for the user to want to "fill in the blanks" which the

         written medium leaves open.  Moreover, if the user realized that

         any information garnered about the recipient user was probably

         unverified externally to Usenet, he or she should come to the

         conclusion that the recipient user may bear little resemblance to

         the user he or she has in mind.


         This distinction between a user in Usenet and the "actual" user

         in the external world is in the concept of "persona."  Although

         the user preparing to send the message may not realize it, as far

         as other users are concerned, he or she is a persona as well.

         Therefore, all users of Usenet interact with one another via

         personae.  Moreover, the personae are perceived to engage in a

         range of pursuits which is derived from the words of the users.

         For every exchange of articles at the level of the users, there

         is an analogous "action" at the level of the personae.

         Furthermore, the existence of the personae depends entirely upon

         the users' willingness to continue accessing Usenet.  With this

         complex duality always present, it is often expedient for users

         to "forget" the dichotomy between user and persona, but for the

         purposes of this thesis, it can never be forgotten because it is

         on the level of the personae upon which the concepts of _________
                                                                 Leviathan

         are established to operate.

         3.   ______ _____ _____ ____ ________ ___ _______ ______ _______
              Hobbes helps prove that personae are persons within Usenet.

         With the notion of "persona" having been established, it is

         possible to establish a preliminary parallel to Hobbes' political

         philosophy in _________
                       Leviathan.  This is done by using Hobbes'

         definition of "person" to prove that personae are indeed analogs

         for persons in Usenet.  This proof clears the way to apply

         Hobbesian theory to personae rather than users.


         4.   ____ ________ ________ ____ _______ ________ ____ ___ __
              Like persons, personae have powers, although they may be

         __________
         different.  During this stage of the discussion, further

         parallels are drawn from Hobbes' "persons" to Usenet personae.

         These parallels include the several powers which Hobbes suggests

         are possessed in persons.  Among these powers are "extraordinary

         strength, form, prudence, arts, eloquence, liberality, and

         nobility."  From these powers of the external world, Usenet

         analogs are developed to "fill in the blanks" or add form and

         personality to the images of one another in the minds of all

         users.  Of these powers, "eloquence," is supreme in Usenet

         because finesse in language is highly valued in a world of words.

         5.   _____ ___________ __ ______ __ ________ ___ ________ ____
              Users participate in Usenet to maximize its utility, thus




                                          61


         _______ _________ __ ____ __ ____ _____________ ___ ________
         persona existence is tied to user participation and utility.

         Here the benefits of powers are examined by analyzing Hobbes'

         relevant passages and developing Usenet analogs.  It is

         established that the personae, like persons, are inclined to

         pursue "power after power" to insure their "present means."  On

         the level of the users, this pursuit of power is actually a

         continuous cycle of statement and response intended to maximize

         the utility of Usenet.  Their reputations are the "collective

         memory" of their participation in the cycle.  As long as

         continuous participation is provided by the users, the existence

         of their personae is insured.


         6.   _____________ ___ ______ ___________ __ ______________
              Participation may become contentious or uninteresting,

         _______ __________ ________ _______ ___ ___________ ________
         thereby decreasing Usenet's utility and threatening personae

         __________ ________ _____ ___ ____________ _______ _____
         existence; however, users can increasingly subject their

         _____________ __ __________
         participation to restraint.  As a matter of participating in the

         cycle of statement and response, users may encounter offensive or

         insulting articles called "flames."  These articles and others

         which "clutter" the various newsgroups threaten the utility of

         Usenet to the users.  To bolster utility, users have several

         alternatives other than moderation.  They may ignore the

         offensive or uninteresting articles, conform to the "netiquette"

         standards of behavior, or block the display of "clutter" from

         their screens.  On the level of the personae, the "flames" are

         perceived as "attacks" which ultimately threaten their existence.

         In "fear of wounds, or death," they may be forced to surrender

         themselves to the protection of a common power.

         7.   __ ________ ________ _______ ___ __ ________ ________
              To maximize Usenet's utility and to maintain personae

         __________ ____ _____ ___ ______ __ _____ _______ ______ __
         existence, some users may decide to allow another person to

         _______ __ ________ ___ ______ __ _____ ______________ ____
         control or moderate the extent of their participation, thus

         ___________ __ __________ ___ _________ __ _____ _________
         controlling or moderating the existence of their personae.  In

         this point, a sample cycle of statement and response is analyzed

         leading to the discussion of moderation as the last resort to

         coping with the "clutter" or "noise" in the newsgroups.  On the

         level of the personae, moderation represents the joint surrender

         of their individual powers to common power for the purpose of

         preserving their existence in a hostile environment.


         The quantitative portion of this study raises provocative

         questions regarding trends towards moderation in a forum hailed

         by many as a "modemocracy" and a realization of the "global

         village."  A future study could track the frequency of the

         Leviathan in Usenet over a period of several months.  These data

         could be contrasted with the failure of a completely moderated,

         alternate to Usenet formerly known as "InModeration."  Perhaps

         the combination of moderated and unmoderated newsgroups in Usenet

         points to the utility of "choice" and "freedom" which

         "InModeration" might have underestimated.  Additionally, refined

         operationalization and a larger sample size might provide more

         insight into the less obvious manifestations of the Leviathan in

         Usenet.

         Although this thesis has been limited to the Hobbesian

         perspective on the origins of government, future researchers

         should be encouraged to employ other theoretical visions to the




                                          62


         study of Usenet, or of the internet in general.  The simple act

         of searching for proof within the internet may more readily

         fasten the theories' nuances in a student's mind than traditional

         philosophical study.  Where social studies were always possible,

         internet studies present an equally complex, but more easily

         observable, self-documenting society.


         This theorist also recognizes and encourages the need for more

         behavioral research.  While normative study is valuable in its

         own right, numerical analysis of internet society is needed.  It

         is important to know the distribution of the various degrees of

         representation of users by personae, how the number of users

         affects the generation of  government, and the number and types

         of and reasons for selecting one polity over another.  These

         lines of inquiry do not, of course, cover the entire range, but

         they do suggest that the entirety of political science can

         benefit from internet studies.

         Political scientists are not the first social scientists to

         explore this very new area.  Current research in internet studies

         reveals that insufficient ethical guidelines are available for

         guiding research and there exists considerable debate over how to

         proceed.  For example, this researcher is the sole political

         scientist on a large, research team which is investigating

         computer mediated communication.  Due to the global distances

         between them, the researchers are represented by personae which

         include scholars of English, communication, linguistics, theater,

         sociology, and history.  The qualitative portion of the research

         involves content analysis of the communication of a specific

         group of network individuals.  Issues of privacy and intellectual

         property have arisen.  It is still an unresolved question whether

         the research team should admonish the subjects and then seek

         their permission for further study to be conducted.  It is still

         uncertain whether the study requires a human research waiver.  It

         is still debatable if this kind of analysis is closer to literary

         criticism than behavioral science.  It is still unknown whether

         published research should give the subjects credit for their

         statements or should withhold their names to protect their

         identities.  Despite these compelling questions, the computer

         allows one to cross traditional boundaries--it enables the writer

         to measure and the scientist to write--and to mix and combine

         elements from previously disparate fields.  The problems

         described, of course, issue from the combination of scholars of

         literature with social scientists.  A solution probably lies in

         acknowledging the unresolved nature of that combination once the

         interdisciplinary novelty subsides.  The point, however, is that

         fertile ground for research has been uncovered and that the

         process of how it should be tilled has begun.  To miss the

         opportunity to influence the process would be a major misfortune

         for political science.






                                       Appendix

         This section contains some of Gene Spafford's guidelines because

         they may not be readily available to most readers.  No permission

         was obtained because the documents are freely distributable.  The

         guidelines are reprinted here in a smaller point size to preserve

         their original format and page layout.  Despite this

         accommodation, there are still some formatting problems because

         the margins in the original documents are much narrower than is

         permitted in a thesis.  Additionally, this appendix contains four

         computer generated maps based on Brian Reid's ______ __________
                                                       Usenet Readership

         _______ ______
         Summary Report for April 9, 1991 and a glossary of technical

         terms.



         Original-from: [email protected] (Chuq Von Rospach)


         [Most recent change: 7 September 1987 by [email protected] (Gene

         Spafford)]




                       A Primer on How to Work With the USENET Community


                                      Chuq Von Rospach






           *** You now have access to Usenet, a big network of thousands

         of

           computers.  Other documents or your system administrator will

         provide


           detailed technical documentation.  This message describes the

         Usenet

           culture and customs that have developed over time.  All new

         users should


           read this message to find out how Usenet works. ***

           *** (Old users could read it, too, to refresh their memories.)

         ***



           USENET is a large collection of computers that share data with

         each other.


           It is the people on these computers that make USENET worth the

         effort, and

           for USENET to function properly those people must be able to

         interact in


           productive ways.  This document is intended as a guide to using

         the net in


                                          66




                                          67


           ways that will be pleasant and productive for everyone.



           This document is not intended to teach you how to use USENET.

         Instead, it


           is a guide to using it politely, effectively and efficiently.

           Communication by computer is new to almost everybody, and there

         are


           certain aspects that can make it a frustrating experience until

         you get

           used to them.  This document should help you avoid the worst

         traps.



           The easiest way to learn how to use USENET is to watch how

         others use it.


           Start reading the news and try to figure out what people are

         doing and

           why.  After a couple of weeks you will start understanding why

         certain


           things are done and what things shouldn't be done.  There are

         documents

           available describing the technical details of how to use the

         software.


           These are different depending on which programs you use to

         access the

           news.  You can get copies of these from your system

         administrator.  If you


           do not know who that person is, they can be contacted on most

         systems by

           mailing to account "usenet".





                    Never Forget that the Person on the Other Side is

         Human



           Because your interaction with the network is through a computer

         it is easy

           to forget that there are people "out there." Situations arise

         where


           emotions erupt into a verbal free-for-all that can lead to hurt

         feelings.




                                          68


           Please remember that people all over the world are reading your

         words.  Do


           not attack people if you cannot persuade them with your

         presentation of

           the facts.  Screaming, cursing, and abusing others only serves

         to make


           people think less of you and less willing to help you when you

         need it.



           If you are upset at something or someone, wait until you have

         had a chance

           to calm down and think about it.  A cup of coffee or a good

         night's sleep


           works wonders on your perspective.  Hasty words create more

         problems than

           they solve.  Try not to say anything to others you would not

         say to them


           in person in a room full of people.



                                            Be Brief



           Never say in ten words what you can say in fewer.  Say it

         succinctly and

           it will have a greater impact.  Remember that the longer you

         make your


           article, the fewer people will bother to read it.



                        Your Postings Reflect Upon You -- Be Proud of Them



           Most people on USENET will know you only by what you say and

         how well you

           say it.  They may someday be your co-workers or friends.  Take

         some time


           to make sure each posting is something that will not embarrass

         you later.

           Minimize your spelling errors and make sure that the article is

         easy to


           read and understand.  Writing is an art and to do it well

         requires

           practice.  Since much of how people judge you on the net is

         based on your




                                          69


           writing, such time is well spent.



                                     Use Descriptive Titles



           The subject line of an article is there to enable a person with

         a limited


           amount of time to decide whether or not to read your article.

         Tell people

           what the article is about before they read it.  A title like

         "Car for


           Sale" to rec.autos does not help as much as "66 MG Midget for

         sale:

           Beaverton OR." Don't expect people to read your article to find

         out what


           it is about because many of them won't bother.  Some sites

         truncate the

           length of the subject line to 40 characters so keep your

         subjects short


           and to the point.



                                   Think About Your Audience



           When you post an article, think about the people you are trying

         to

           reach.  Asking UNIX(*) questions on rec.autos will not reach as

         many


           of the people you want to reach as if you asked them on

           comp.unix.questions or comp.unix.wizards.  Try to get the most


           appropriate audience for your message, not the widest.



           It is considered bad form to post both to misc.misc, soc.net-

         people,

           or misc.wanted and to some other newsgroup.  If it belongs in

         that


           other newsgroup, it does not belong in misc.misc, soc.net-

         people,

           or misc.wanted.



           If your message is of interest to a limited geographic area

         (apartments,




                                          70


           car sales, meetings, concerts, etc...), restrict the

         distribution of the


           message to your local area.  Some areas have special newsgroups

         with

           geographical limitations, and the recent versions of the news

         software


           allow you to limit the distribution of material sent to world-

         wide

           newsgroups.  Check with your system administrator to see what

         newsgroups


           are available and how to use them.



           If you want to try a test of something, do not use a world-wide

         newsgroup!

           Messages in misc.misc that say "This is a test" are likely to

         cause


           large numbers of caustic messages to flow into your mailbox.

         There are

           newsgroups that are local to your computer or area that should

         be used.


           Your system administrator can tell you what they are.



                               Be Careful with Humor and Sarcasm



           Without the voice inflections and body language of personal

           communications, it is easy for a remark meant to be funny to be


           misinterpreted.  Subtle humor tends to get lost, so take steps

         to make

           sure that people realize you are trying to be funny.  The net

         has


           developed a symbol called the smiley face.  It looks like ":-)"

         and points

           out sections of articles with humorous intent.  No matter how

         broad the


           humor or satire, it is safer to remind people that you are

         being funny.



           But also be aware that quite frequently satire is posted

         without any

           explicit indications.  If an article outrages you strongly, you


           should ask yourself if it just may have been unmarked satire.




                                          71


           Several self-proclaimed connoisseurs refuse to use smiley

         faces, so


           take heed or you may make a temporary fool of yourself.



                                    Only Post a Message Once



           Avoid posting messages to more than one newsgroup unless you

         are sure

           it is appropriate.  If you do post to multiple newsgroups, do

         not


           post to each group separately.  Instead, specify all the groups

         on a

           single copy of the message.  This reduces network overhead and

         lets


           people who subscribe to more than one of those groups see the

         message

           once instead of having to wade through each copy.



                        Please Rotate Messages With Questionable Content



           Certain newsgroups (such as rec.humor) have messages in them

         that may


           be offensive to some people.  To make sure that these messages

         are

           not read unless they are explicitly requested, these messages

         should


           be encrypted.  The standard encryption method is to rotate each

           letter by thirteen characters so that an "a" becomes an "n".

         This is


           known on the network as "rot13" and when you rotate a message

         the

           word "rot13" should be in the "Subject:" line.  Most of the

         software


           used to read usenet articles have some way of encrypting and

           decrypting messages.  Your system administrator can tell you

         how the


           software on your system works, or you can use the Unix command

         "tr

           [a-z][A-Z] [n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]". (Note that some versions of

         Unix


           don't require the [] in the "tr" command.  In fact, some




                                          72


         systems will


           get upset if you use them in an unquoted manner.  The following

           should work for everyone, but may be shortened on some systems:


                 tr '[a-m][n-z][A-M][N-Z]' '[n-z][a-m][N-Z][A-M]'

           Don't forget the single quotes!)



                              Summarize What You are Following Up



           When you are following up someone's article, please summarize

         the parts of


           the article to which you are responding.  This allows readers

         to

           appreciate your comments rather than trying to remember what

         the original


           article said.  It is also possible for your response to get to

         some sites

           before the original article.



           Summarization is best done by including appropriate quotes from

         the


           original article.  Do not include the entire article since it

         will

           irritate the people who have already seen it.  Even if you are

         responding


           to the entire article, summarize only the major points you are

         discussing.



                                  When Summarizing, Summarize!



           When you request information from the network, it is common

         courtesy to

           report your findings so that others can benefit as well.  The

         best way of


           doing this is to take all the responses that you received and

         edit them

           into a single article that is posted to the places where you

         originally


           posted your question.  Take the time to strip headers, combine

         duplicate

           information, and write a short summary.  Try to credit the

         information to




                                          73


           the people that sent it to you, where possible.



                                Use Mail, Don't Post a Follow-up



           One of the biggest problems we have on the network is that when

         someone


           asks a question, many people send out identical answers.  When

         this

           happens, dozens of identical answers pour through the net.

         Mail your


           answer to the person and suggest that they summarize to the

         network.  This

           way the net will only see a single copy of the answers, no

         matter how many


           people answer the question.



           If you post a question, please remind people to send you the

         answers by

           mail and offer to summarize them to the network.



                Read All Follow-ups and Don't Repeat What Has Already Been

         Said



           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.



                            Be Careful About Copyrights and Licenses



           Once something is posted onto the network, it is effectively in

         the public


           domain.  When posting material to the network, keep in mind

         that material

           that is UNIX-related may be restricted by the license you or

         your company


           signed with AT&T and be careful not to violate it.  You should

         also be

           aware that posting movie reviews, song lyrics, or anything else

         published




                                          74


           under a copyright could cause you, your company, or the net

         itself to be


           held liable for damages, so we highly recommend caution in

         using this

           material.



                                  Cite Appropriate References



           If you are using facts to support a cause, state where they

         came from.


           Don't take someone else's ideas and use them as your own.  You

         don't want

           someone pretending that your ideas are theirs; show them the

         same respect.



                              Mark or Rotate Answers and Spoilers



           When you post something (like a movie review that discusses a

         detail of


           the plot) which might spoil a surprise for other people, please

         mark your

           message with a warning so that they can skip the message.

         Another


           alternative would be to use the "rot13" protocol to encrypt the

         message so

           it cannot be read accidentally.  When you post a message with a

         spoiler in


           it make sure the word "spoiler" is part of the "Subject:" line.



                               Spelling Flames Considered Harmful



           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




                                          75


           people who used to be friends to get angry with each other.



           It is important to remember that we all make mistakes, and that

         there are


           many users on the net who use English as a second language.  If

         you feel

           that you must make a comment on the quality of a posting,

         please do so by


           mail, not on the network.



                                    Don't Overdo Signatures



           Signatures are nice, and many people can have a signature added

         to their

           postings automatically by placing it in a file called

         "$HOME/.signature".


           Don't overdo it.  Signatures can tell the world something about

         you, but

           keep them short.  A signature that is longer than the message

         itself is


           considered to be in bad taste.  The main purpose of a signature

         is to help

           people locate you on the net, not learn your life story.  Every

         signature


           should include your return address relative to a well known

         site on the

           network.  Your system administrator can give this to you.





                                 Summary of Things to Remember




                Never forget that the person on the other side is human


                Be brief

                Your postings reflect upon you; be proud of them


                Use descriptive titles

                Think about your audience


                Be careful with humor and sarcasm

                Only post a message once




                                          76


                Please rotate material with questionable content


                Summarize what you are following up

                Use mail, don't post a follow-up


                Read all follow-ups and don't repeat what has already been

         said

                Be careful about copyrights and licenses


                Cite appropriate references

                When summarizing, summarize


                Mark or rotate answers or spoilers

                Spelling flames considered harmful


                Don't overdo signatures




         (*)UNIX is a registered trademark of AT&T.



         -----------


               This document is in the public domain and may be reproduced

         or

               excerpted by anyone wishing to do so.


         ----------

         Gene Spafford


         Dept. of Computer Sciences, Purdue University, W. Lafayette IN

         47907-2004

         Internet:  [email protected]   uucp:

         ...!{decwrl,gatech,ucbvax}!purdue!spaf




                                          77


         Original-from: [email protected] (Mark Horton)


         [Most recent change: 17 September 1987 by [email protected] (Gene

         Spafford)]



         This message describes some of the rules of conduct on Usenet.

         The rules

         vary depending on the newsgroup.



         Some newsgroups are intended for discussions and some for

         announcements


         or queries.  It is not usually a good idea to carry on

         discussions in

         newsgroups that are designated otherwise.  It is never a good

         idea to


         carry on "meta-discussions" about whether a given discussion is

         appropriate -- such traffic mushrooms until nobody can find

         articles


         that belong.  If you are unhappy with what some user said, send

         him/her

         mail, don't post it.



         Before posting, think about where your article is going.  If it's


         posted to a "comp", "news", "misc", "soc", "sci", "rec" or "talk"

         newsgroup, it will probably go to the USA, Canada, Europe, Korea,

         and


         Australia.  Certain articles are only of local interest (e.g.

         used car

         ads) and it is inappropriate to post them to the whole world.

         Use the


         "Distribution" feature to restrict distribution to your local

         area.  If

         you don't know how to use this feature, read "Frequently

         Submitted


         Items" in another article in news.announce.newusers.



         Don't post announcements regarding major news events (e.g. the

         space

         shuttle has just exploded!) to news groups.  By the time most

         people


         receive such items, they will long since have been informed by

         conventional media.  If you wish to discuss such an event on the




                                          78


         net,


         use the "misc.headlines" newsgroup.



         Announcement of professional products or services on Usenet is

         allowed;

         however, since someone else is paying the phone bills for this,

         it is


         important that it be of overall benefit to Usenet.  Post to the

         appropriate newsgroup -- comp.newprod -- never to a general

         purpose


         newsgroup such as "misc.misc".  Clearly mark your article as a

         product

         announcement in the subject.  Never repeat these -- one article

         per


         product at the most; preferably group everything into one

         article.

         Advertising hype is especially frowned upon -- stick to technical


         facts.  Obnoxious or inappropriate announcements or articles

         violating

         this policy will generally be rejected.  This policy is, of

         course,


         subject to change if it becomes a problem.



         Some newsgroups are moderated.  In these groups, you cannot post

         directly, either by convention or because the software prevents

         it.  To


         post to these newsgroups, send mail to the moderator. Examples:



         Newsgroup      Moderator      Purpose

         ---------           ---------           -------


         news.announce.important cbosgd!announce Important announcements

         for everyone

         comp.std.c               cbosgd!std-c        ANSI C standards

         discussion


         comp.std.unix       ut-sally!std-unix   ANSI Unix standards

         discussion

         comp.std.mumps      plus5!std-mumps     ANSI Mumps standards

         discussion


         comp.unix           cbosgd!unix         Discussion of Unix*

         features and bugs




                                          79


         Some newsgroups have special purpose rules:



         Newsgroup      Rules


         ---------           -----

         news.announce.importantModerated, no direct postings, important

         things only.


         misc.wanted         Queries, "I want an x", "Anyone want my x?".

         No

                             discussions. Don't post to more than one

         xxx.wanted.


                                       Use the smallest appropriate wanted

         (e.g. used car

                                       ads to nj.wanted.)


                                       Requests for sources, termcaps,

         etc. should go to the

                                       "comp.sources.wanted" newsgroup.


         rec.humor                Clean humor only; anything offensive

         must be rotated;

                                       no discussions -- humor only.

         Discussions go in


                                       rec.humor.d

         rec.arts.movies          Don't post anything revealing part of a

         movie


                                       without marking it (spoiler) in the

         subject.

         rec.arts.*                    Same as movies -- mark spoilers in

         the subject line.


         news.groups              Discussions about new groups: whether to

         create

                                       them and what to call them.  Don't

         post yes/no


                                       votes, mail them to the author

         misc.test                     Use the smallest test group

         possible, e.g.


                                       "test" or "ucb.test".  Say in the

         body of the

                                       message what you are testing.



         It is perfectly legal to reproduce short extracts of a

         copyrighted work


         for critical purposes, but reproduction in whole is strictly and




                                          80


         explicitly forbidden by US and international copyright law.

         (Otherwise,


         there would be no way for the artist to make money, and there

         would

         thus be less motive for people to go to the trouble of making

         their art


         available at all.  The crime of theft is as serious in this

         context as

         any other, even though you may not have to pick locks, mask your

         face,


         or conceal merchandise.)



         All opinions or statements made in messages posted to Usenet

         should be

         taken as the opinions of the person who wrote the message.  They

         do not


         necessarily represent the opinions of the employer of that

         person, the

         owner of the computer from which the message was posted, or

         anyone


         involved with Usenet or the underlying networks of which Usenet

         is made

         up.  All responsibility for statements made in Usenet messages

         rests


         with the individual posting the message.



         Posting of information on Usenet is to be viewed as similar to

         publication.  Because of this, do not post instructions for how

         to do


         some illegal act (such as jamming radar or obtaining cable TV

         service

         illegally); also do not ask how to do illegal acts by posting to

         the


         net.



         If you have a standard signature you like to append to your

         articles,

         put it in a file called .signature in your home directory.

         "postnews"


         and "inews" will automatically append it to your article.  Please

         keep

         your signatures concise, as people do not appreciate seeing




                                          81


         lengthy


         signatures, nor paying the phone bills to repeatedly transmit

         them.  2

         or 3 lines are usually plenty.  Sometimes it is also appropriate

         to add


         another line or two for addresses on other major networks where

         you can

         be reached (e.g., ARPA, CSnet, Bitnet).  Long signatures are


         definitely frowned upon.  DO NOT include drawings, pictures,

         maps, or

         other graphics in your signature -- it is not the appropriate

         place


         for such material and viewed as rude by other readers.



         If you post an article and remember something you've left out or

         realize you've made a factual error, you can cancel the article

         and (if


         cancelled quickly enough) prevent its distribution.  Then you can

         correct whatever was wrong and post a new copy.  In "rn" and


         "readnews", an article that you posted can be cancelled with the

         "C"

         command.  Be aware, however, that some people may have already

         read the


         incorrect version so the sooner you cancel something, the better.

         --


         Gene Spafford

         Dept. of Computer Sciences, Purdue University, W. Lafayette IN

         47907-2004


         Internet:  [email protected]   uucp:

         ...!{decwrl,gatech,ucbvax}!purdue!spaf




                                          82


         Original-from: [email protected] (A. Jeff Offutt VI)


         [Most recent change: 7 September 1987 by [email protected] (Gene

         Spafford)]



         I would like to take a moment to share some of my knowledge of

         writing

         style.  If you read the pointers below, remember: it's easy to

         agree


         that they make sense but it's much harder to apply them.



         References:

          Cunningham and Pearsall, "How to Write For the World of Work"


          Strunk & White, "Elements of Style"



         The above references are both excellent books.  Cunningham is a

         standard in Tech writing classes and won an award for the best

         tech


         writing book from the Association for Teaching of Technical

         Writing.  I

         was lucky enough to take a class from him as an undergraduate.

         Strunk


         is a standard in college composition classes.  Other ideas here

         come

         from my own experience on the net and hints from other people.



         This is a "long article". The rest of it is simply a list of

         pointers.



                        Writing style:



          * Write *below* the readers' reading level.  The avg. person in

         the US


            reads on a 5th grade level. The avg. professional reads on

         about the 12th

            grade level.



          * Keep paragraphs short and sweet.  Keep sentences shorter and

         sweeter.


            This means "concise," not cryptic.




                                          83


          * White space is not wasted space -- it greatly improves

         clarity.



          * Pick your words to have only *one* meaning.  Vagueness is

         considered


            artistic by literary critics.  We are not being literary here.



          * People can only grasp about seven things at once.  This means

         ideas in a

            paragraph, major sections, etc..



          * There are several variations on any one sentence.  A passive,

         questioning


            or negative sentence takes longer to read.




                        Net style:



          * Subtlety is not communicated well in written form - especially

         over a


            computer.



          * The above applies to humor as well. (rec.humor, of course, not

         included.)



          * When being especially "flame-boyant", I find it helpful to go

         the bathroom

            before actually sending.  Then, I often change the tone

         considerably.



          * Subject lines should be used very carefully.  How much time

         have you


            wasted reading articles with a misleading subject line?



          * References need to be made.  When you answer mail, you have

         the original

            message fresh in your mind.  When I receive your answer, I

         don't.



          * It's *much* easier to read a mixture of upper and lower case




                                          84


         letters.



          * Leaving out articles (such as "the," "a," "an," etc.) for

         "brevity"


            mangles the meaning of your sentences and takes longer to

         read. It saves

            you time at the expense of your reader.



          * Be careful of contextual meanings of words. For instance, I

         used "articles"


            just now.  In the context of netnews, it has a different

         meaning than I

            intended.



          * Remember - this is an international network.



          * Remember - your future employers may be reading your articles.



         'Nuff said.



         These pointers are all easily supported by arguments and

         research.


         There's a lot more to say, but....

         --


         Gene Spafford

         Dept. of Computer Sciences, Purdue University, W. Lafayette IN

         47907-2004


         Internet:  [email protected]   uucp:

         ...!{decwrl,gatech,ucbvax}!purdue!spafOriginal-author:

         [email protected] (Brad Templeton)

         Archive-name: emily-postnews/part1


         Last-change: 30 Nov 91 by [email protected] (Brad Templeton)




         **NOTE: this is intended to be satirical.  If you do not

         recognize


           it as such, consult a doctor or professional comedian.  The

           recommendations in this article should recognized for what


           they are -- admonitions about what NOT to do.




                                          85





                        "Dear Emily Postnews"



              Emily Postnews, foremost authority on proper net behaviour,


              gives her advice on how to act on the net.



         =================================================================

         ===



         Dear Miss Postnews: How long should my signature be? --

         verbose@noisy



         A: Dear Verbose: Please try and make your signature as long as

         you

         can.  It's much more important than your article, of course, so

         try


         to have more lines of signature than actual text.



         Try to include a large graphic made of ASCII characters, plus

         lots of

         cute quotes and slogans.  People will never tire of reading these


         pearls of wisdom again and again, and you will soon become

         personally

         associated with the joy each reader feels at seeing yet another


         delightful repeat of your signature.



         Be sure as well to include a complete map of USENET with each

         signature, to show how anybody can get mail to you from any site

         in


         the world.  Be sure to include Internet gateways as well.  Also

         tell

         people on your own site how to mail to you.  Give independent


         addresses for Internet, UUCP, and BITNET, even if they're all the

         same.



         Aside from your reply address, include your full name, company

         and


         organization.  It's just common courtesy -- after all, in some




                                          86


         newsreaders people have to type an *entire* keystroke to go back

         to


         the top of your article to see this information in the header.



         By all means include your phone number and street address in

         every

         single article.  People are always responding to usenet articles

         with


         phone calls and letters.  It would be silly to go to the extra

         trouble

         of including this information only in articles that need a

         response by


         conventional channels!

                             ------


         Dear Emily: Today I posted an article and forgot to include my

         signature.  What should I do?  -- forgetful@myvax



         A: Dear Forgetful: Rush to your terminal right away and post an


         article that says, "Oops, I forgot to post my signature with that

         last

         article.  Here it is."



         Since most people will have forgotten your earlier article,


         (particularly since it dared to be so boring as to not have a

         nice,

         juicy signature) this will remind them of it.  Besides, people

         care


         much more about the signature anyway.  See the previous letter

         for

         more important details.



         Also, be sure to include your signature TWICE in each article.

         That


         way you're sure people will read it.



                             ------

         Dear Ms. Postnews: I couldn't get mail through to somebody on

         another


         site.  What should I do? -- [email protected]




                                          87


         A: Dear Eager: No problem, just post your message to a group that

         a


         lot of people read.  Say, "This is for John Smith.  I couldn't

         get

         mail through so I'm posting it.  All others please ignore."



         This way tens of thousands of people will spend a few seconds

         scanning


         over and ignoring your article, using up over 16 man-hours their

         collective time, but you will be saved the terrible trouble of


         checking through Usenet maps or looking for alternate routes.

         Just

         think, if you couldn't distribute your message to 30,000 other


         computers, you might actually have to (gasp) call directory

         assistance

         for 60 cents, or even phone the person.  This can cost as much as

         a


         few DOLLARS (!) for a 5 minute call!



         And certainly it's better to spend 10 to 20 dollars of other

         people's

         money distributing the message then for you to have to waste $9

         on an


         overnight letter, or even 29 cents on a stamp!



         Don't forget.  The world will end if your message doesn't get

         through,

         so post it as many places as you can.



                             ------


         Q: What about a test message?



         A: It is important, when testing, to test the entire net.  Never

         test

         merely a subnet distribution when the whole net can be done.

         Also put


         "please ignore" on your test messages, since we all know that

         everybody always skips a message with a line like that.  Don't

         use a


         subject like "My sex is female but I demand to be addressed as




                                          88


         male."


         because such articles are read in depth by all USEnauts.



                             ------

         Q: Somebody just posted that Roman Polanski directed Star Wars.

         What


         should I do?



         A: Post the correct answer at once!  We can't have people go on

         believing that!  Very good of you to spot this.  You'll probably

         be


         the only one to make the correction, so post as soon as you can.

         No

         time to lose, so certainly don't wait a day, or check to see if


         somebody else has made the correction.



         And it's not good enough to send the message by mail.  Since

         you're

         the only one who really knows that it was Francis Coppola, you

         have to


         inform the whole net right away!



                             ------

         Q: I read an article that said, "reply by mail, I'll summarize."

         What


         should I do?



         A: Post your response to the whole net.  That request applies

         only to

         dumb people who don't have something interesting to say.  Your


         postings are much more worthwhile than other people's, so it

         would be

         a waste to reply by mail.



                             ------


         Q: I collected replies to an article I wrote, and now it's time

         to

         summarize.  What should I do?




                                          89


         A: Simply concatenate all the articles together into a big file

         and


         post that.  On USENET, this is known as a summary.  It lets

         people

         read all the replies without annoying newsreaders getting in the

         way.


         Do the same when summarizing a vote.



                             ------

         Q: I saw a long article that I wish to rebut carefully, what

         should I


         do?



         A: Include the entire text with your article, particularly the

         signature, and include your comments closely packed between the

         lines.


         Be sure to post, and not mail, even though your article looks

         like a

         reply to the original.  Everybody *loves* to read those long


         point-by-point debates, especially when they evolve into name-

         calling

         and lots of "Is too!" -- "Is not!" -- "Is too, twizot!"

         exchanges.



         Be sure to follow-up everything, and never let another person get

         in


         the last word on a net debate.  Why, if people let other people

         have

         the last word, then discussions would actually stop!  Remember,

         other


         net readers aren't nearly as clever as you, and if somebody posts

         something wrong, the readers can't possibly realize that on their

         own


         without your elucidations.  If somebody gets insulting in their

         net

         postings, the best response is to get right down to their level

         and


         fire a return salvo.  When I read one net person make an

         insulting

         attack on another, I always immediately take it as gospel unless

         a




                                          90


         rebuttal is posted.  It never makes me think less of the

         insulter, so


         it's your duty to respond.



                             ------

         Q: How can I choose what groups to post in?



         A: Pick as many as you can, so that you get the widest audience.


         After all, the net exists to give you an audience.  Ignore those

         who

         suggest you should only use groups where you think the article is


         highly appropriate.  Pick all groups where anybody might even be

         slightly interested.



         Always make sure followups go to all the groups.  In the rare

         event


         that you post a followup which contains something original, make

         sure

         you expand the list of groups.  Never include a "Followup-to:"

         line in


         the header, since some people might miss part of the valuable

         discussion in the fringe groups.



                             ------


         Q: How about an example?



         A: Ok.  Let's say you want to report that Gretzky has been traded

         from

         the Oilers to the Kings.  Now right away you might think


         rec.sport.hockey would be enough.  WRONG.  Many more people might

         be

         interested.  This is a big trade!  Since it's a NEWS article, it


         belongs in the news.* hierarchy as well.  If you are a news

         admin, or

         there is one on your machine, try news.admin.  If not, use

         news.misc.



         The Oilers are probably interested in geology, so try

         sci.geo.fluids.




                                          91


         He is a big star, so post to sci.astro, and sci.space because

         they are


         also interested in stars.  And of course comp.dcom.telecom

         because he

         was born in the birthplace of the telephone.  And because he's


         Canadian, post to soc.culture.Ontario.southwestern.  But that

         group

         doesn't exist, so cross-post to news.groups suggesting it should

         be


         created.  With this many groups of interest, your article will be

         quite bizarre, so post to talk.bizarre as well.  (And post to


         comp.std.mumps, since they hardly get any articles there, and a

         "comp"

         group will propagate your article further.)



         You may also find it is more fun to post the article once in each


         group.  If you list all the newsgroups in the same article, some

         newsreaders will only show the the article to the reader once!

         Don't


         tolerate this.



                             ------

         Q: How do I create a newsgroup?



         A: The easiest way goes something like "inews -C newgroup ....",

         and


         while that will stir up lots of conversation about your new

         newsgroup,

         it might not be enough.



         First post a message in news.groups describing the group.  This

         is a


         "call for discussion."  (If you see a call for discussion,

         immediately

         post a one line message saying that you like or dislike the

         group.)


         When proposing the group, pick a name with a TLA (three-letter

         acronym) that will be understood only by "in" readers of the

         group.




                                          92


         After the call for discussion, post the call for flames, followed

         by a


         call for arguments about the name and a call for run-on puns.

         Eventually make a call for "votes." USENET is a democracy, so

         voters


         can now all post their votes to ensure they get to all 30,000

         machines

         instead of just the person counting. Every few days post a long


         summary of all the votes so that people can complain about bad

         mailers

         and double votes.  It means you'll be more popular and get lots

         of


         mail.  At the end of 21 days you can post the vote results so

         that

         people can argue about all the technical violations of the

         guidelines


         you made.  Blame them on the moderator-of-the-week for

         news.announce.newgroups.  Then your group might be created.



         To liven up discussion, choose a good cross-match for your

         hierarchy


         and group.  For example, comp.race.formula1 or soc.vlsi.design

         would

         be good group names.  If you want your group created quickly,

         include


         an interesting word like "sex" or "activism."  To avoid limiting

         discussion, make the name as broad as possible, and don't forget

         that


         TLA.



         If possible, count votes from a leaf site with a once-a-week

         polled

         connection to botswanavax.  Schedule the vote during your relay

         site's


         head crash if possible.



         Under no circumstances use the trial group method, because it

         eliminates the discussion, flame, pun, voting and guideline-

         violation


         accusation phases, thus taking all the fun out of it.  To create

         an




                                          93


         ALT group, simply issue the creation command.  Then issue an

         rmgroup


         and some more newgroup messages to save other netters the trouble

         of

         doing that part.



                             ------


         Q: I cant spell worth a dam.  I hope your going too tell me what

         to

         do?



         A: Don't worry about how your articles look.  Remember it's the


         message that counts, not the way it's presented.  Ignore the fact

         that

         sloppy spelling in a purely written forum sends out the same

         silent


         messages that soiled clothing would when addressing an audience.



                             ------

         Q: How should I pick a subject for my articles?



         A: Keep it short and meaningless.  That way people will be forced

         to


         actually read your article to find out what's in it.  This means

         a

         bigger audience for you, and we all know that's what the net is

         for.


         If you do a followup, be sure and keep the same subject, even if

         it's

         totally meaningless and not part of the same discussion.  If you


         don't, you won't catch all the people who are looking for stuff

         on the

         original topic, and that means less audience for you.



                             ------


         Q: What sort of tone should I take in my article?



         A: Be as outrageous as possible.  If you don't say outlandish

         things,

         and fill your article with libelous insults of net people, you




                                          94


         may not


         stick out enough in the flood of articles to get a response.  The

         more

         insane your posting looks, the more likely it is that you'll get

         lots


         of followups.  The net is here, after all, so that you can get

         lots of

         attention.



         If your article is polite, reasoned and to the point, you may

         only get


         mailed replies.  Yuck!



                             ------

         Q: The posting software suggested I had too long a signature and

         too


         many lines of included text in my article.  What's the best

         course?



         A: Such restrictions were put in the software for no reason at

         all, so

         don't even try to figure out why they might apply to your

         article.


         Turns out most people search the net to find nice articles that

         consist of the complete text of an earlier article plus a few

         lines.



         In order to help these people, fill your article with dummy

         original


         lines to get past the restrictions.  Everybody will thank you for

         it.



         For your signature, I know it's tough, but you will have to read

         it in

         with the editor.  Do this twice to make sure it's firmly in

         there.  By


         the way, to show your support for the free distribution of

         information, be sure to include a copyright message forbidding


         transmission of your article to sites whose USENET politics you

         don't

         like.




                                          95




         Also, if you do have a lot of free time and want to trim down the

         text

         in your article, be sure to delete some of the attribution lines

         so


         that it looks like the original author of -- say -- a plea for

         world

         peace actually wrote the followup calling for the nuking of

         Bermuda.



                             ------


         Q: They just announced on the radio that the United States has

         invaded

         Iraq.  Should I post?



         A: Of course.  The net can reach people in as few as 3 to 5 days.


         It's the perfect way to inform people about such news events long

         after the broadcast networks have covered them.  As you are

         probably


         the only person to have heard the news on the radio, be sure to

         post

         as soon as you can.



                             ------


         Q: I have this great joke.  You see, these three strings walk

         into a

         bar...



         A: Oh dear.  Don't spoil it for me.  Submit it to rec.humor, and

         post


         it to the moderator of rec.humor.funny at the same time.  I'm

         sure

         he's never seen that joke.



                             ------


         Q: What computer should I buy?  An Atari ST or an Amiga?



         A: Cross post that question to the Atari and Amiga groups.  It's

         an

         interesting and novel question that I am sure they would love to




                                          96


         investigate in those groups.  There is no need to read the groups

         in


         advance or examine the "frequently asked question" lists to see

         if the

         topic has already been dealt with.  In fact, you don't need to

         read


         the group at all, and you can tell people that in your query.



                             ------

         Q: What about other important questions?  How should I know when

         to


         post?



         A: Always post them.  It would be a big waste of your time to

         find a

         knowledgeable user in one of the groups and ask through private

         mail


         if the topic has already come up.  Much easier to bother

         thousands of

         people with the same question.



                             ------


         Q: Somebody just posted a query to the net, and I want to get the

         answer too.  What should I do?



         A: Immediately post a following, including the complete text of

         the


         query.  At the bottom add, "Me too!"  If somebody else has done

         this,

         follow up their article and add "Me three," or whatever number is


         appropriate.  Don't forget your full signature.  After all, if

         you

         just mail the original poster and ask for a copy of the answers,

         you


         will simply clutter the poster's mailbox, and save people who do

         answer the question the joyful duty of noting all the "me (n)s"

         and


         sending off all the multiple copies.



                             ------




                                          97


         Q: What is the measure of a worthwhile group?



         A: Why, it's Volume, Volume, Volume.  Any group that has lots of

         noise


         in it must be good.  Remember, the higher the volume of material

         in a

         group, the higher percentage of useful, factual and insightful


         articles you will find.  In fact, if a group can't demonstrate a

         high

         enough volume, it should be deleted from the net.



                             ------


         Q: Emily, I'm having a serious disagreement with somebody on the

         net.

         I tried complaints to his sysadmin, organizing mail campaigns,

         called


         for his removal from the net and phoning his employer to get him

         fired.  Everybody laughed at me.  What can I do?



         A: Go to the daily papers.  Most modern reporters are top-notch


         computer experts who will understand the net, and your problems,

         perfectly.  They will print careful, reasoned stories without any


         errors at all, and surely represent the situation properly to the

         public.  The public will also all act wisely, as they are also

         fully


         cognizant of the subtle nature of net society.



         Papers never sensationalize or distort, so be sure to point out

         things

         like racism and sexism wherever they might exist.  Be sure as

         well


         that they understand that all things on the net, particularly

         insults,

         are meant literally.  Link what transpires on the net to the

         causes of


         the Holocaust, if possible.  If regular papers won't take the

         story,

         go to a tabloid paper -- they are always interested in good

         stories.




                                          98


         By arranging all this free publicity for the net, you'll become

         very


         well known.  People on the net will wait in eager anticipation

         for

         your every posting, and refer to you constantly.  You'll get more

         mail


         than you ever dreamed possible -- the ultimate in net success.



                             ------

         Q: What does foobar stand for?



         A: It stands for you, dear.


         --

         Gene Spafford


         Software Engineering Research Center & Dept. of Computer Sciences

         Purdue University, W. Lafayette IN 47907-1398


         Internet:  [email protected] phone:  (317) 494-7825






                                       Glossary



         Address:  If a computer is multiuser or belongs to a network,

            addresses are used to differentiate the various users.  An

            address is often the user's name, such as "rich" or

            "spartan."  To differentiate between the "rich" using

            "SJSUVM1" and the "rich" using "portal," an addressing scheme

            is used, e.g., "rich@portal."  This is pronounced "rich at

            portal."  This form of addressing is known as "internet-

            style."  Other forms of addressing exist, such as

            "portal!rich," but internet-style addressing is emerging as

            the standard form of address across networks.


         Bulletin board system:  Also known as "BBS."  See "conferencing."


         Computer: At its most basic level, it is an electronic device

            capable of carrying out millions of instructions per second.

            The instructions it executes are determined by its

            programming or software.  The software enables the computer

            to performs tasks such as word processing, numerical

            calculation and communication.


         Conferencing:  This is a form of electronic mail which requires a

            specialized type of communication software.  Rather than

            being sent to a specific user, a message is distributed

            across the network or internet as an open letter.  These open

            letters are organized by the conferencing software into

            categories of interest, such as "cat lovers" and "Italian

            culture."  Users subscribe only to the categories that

            interest them and ignore the rest.  Tens of thousands of

            personal computers around the world are dedicated to

            providing conferences between their users.  Known as

            "bulletin board systems" or BBS's, they provide a important

            source of information for users with similar interests.  Some

            BBS's belong to a network of BBS's using the same

            conferencing software.  This allows local users to

            "conference" with users at other sites.


         E-mail:  Users can send written messages to one another using a

            special form of communication software called electronic

            mail.  Provided that both users' sites have electronic mail

            and that both sites belong to gatewayed networks, electronic

            mail is an amazingly fast and efficient way for users to

            communicate.  The Internet network (not to be confused with

            the general term "internet") spans the globe and transmits

            mail between sites within seconds.  Slower networks, such as

            Fidonet, can take hours or even days.  Mail delivery is

            limited by the speed of the slowest network along the

            delivery route.  For example, if a machine is a gateway

            between the Internet and the Fidonet networks, mail can take

            seconds to reach the gateway via the Internet and then a few

            days to reach its destination site within Fidonet.



                                          85




                                          86


         Feed:  The Usenet connection between two sites.  The site that

            provides the connection "feeds" the site that wants it.


         Fidonet:  A network of personal computers running the Fido

            bulletin board system software.


         Gateway:  A computer that belongs to at least two networks and is

            registered with each network's NIC.  A gateway computer

            allows users and computers from one side of the gateway to

            communicate with users and computers on the other side.  A

            machine serving as a gateway to several networks can be a

            sort of network hub.  The proliferation of gateway sites has

            facilitated the linking of previously isolated networks.  The

            global community of linked networks is known as the

            "internet."


         Internet:  The internet is the global community of linked

            networks.  It is essentially a network of networks.  The

            National Science Foundation's network or NSFNet is

            confusingly known as the Internet.  The Internet is a high-

            speed network linking the nation's military and research

            institutions with corporations and foreign institutions

            around the world.  While only a part of the internet, the

            Internet is considered its backbone because of its high-speed

            connectivity.  Because of  increasing demand for commercial

            access, the Internet is being restructured as the National

            Research and Education Network (NREN).  Management for this

            new network will be contracted out to a consortium of private

            corporations.


         Kill file:  Blocks the display of the articles originating from

            the users and sites listed in the file.


         Moderation:  A moderated newsgroups requires all users to seek

            approval prior to posting an article.


         Multiuser:  See "user."


         Networks:  One or more computers linked for the purpose of

            communicating or of sharing resources such as printers and

            disk drives.


         Newsgroup:  The categories of discussion available via Usenet.

            There are currently approximately 4,000.


         Site:  This is another term for a computer.  Most often it is

            associated with multiuser computers or computers in a

            network.  Sites have names such as "SJSUVM1," "sjsumcs," and

            "portal."  These names are used to differentiate one computer

            in a network from another.  A similar term is "node."  A node

            almost always refers to a computer in a network.


         System Administrator:  Each user is regulated by his site or

            system administrator and each administrator relies upon his




                                          87


            neighboring site administrators for connectivity within the

            network.  Generally, the administrator is liable for the

            actions of his users, but there is a debate over the extent

            of this liability.


         Usenet:  The largest conferencing system in the world.  The

            Usenet software is used by sites within the UUCP network.  It

            is composed of an estimated 10 million users at one million

            sites whose messages are divided into over a thousand

            categories called "newsgroups."  It is claimed that its

            volume of messages is doubling every two months.  To

            participate in Usenet, a site must have Usenet software and

            be a node within UUCP or the Internet.  Usenet messages can

            spread to other networks via gateways.  These gateways

            convert messages to the format used by their own network's

            conferencing software.  In this manner, Fidonet users can

            receive Usenet messages as Fido "echoes," as they are called

            in the Fidonet conferencing jargon.


         User:  The person who operates the computer.  The user operates

            the computer via software.  The user interacts with the

            software usually via a keyboard, video monitor and printer.

            A "single-user machine" is a computer that can only

            accommodate one user at a time.  A "multiuser machine" is a

            computer that can interact with several users simultaneously.

            This implies that the computer has more than one keyboard or

            point of interaction.  A point of interaction is commonly

            known as a terminal.




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                                          89




                                          90




                                          91






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