Greetings, all.
Hi Tristan
A few days ago I research an article from the early AOL era for Ronda
Hauben and I ended up reading several threads in news.admin.policy while looking for those articles for her.
Surely at least some of these must have had Usenet gateways
that predated AOL's?
Yes, there was a similar, but lesser outcry about CompuServe, GEnie, and Delphi; thoughIt seems that some Delphi users were early spammers and
that really got people angry. However the biggest influx at the time came
from AOL. Their system was easy to use and also treated Usenet as an AOL feature, not as a thing in itself. They also provided no guidelines for netiquette. The other services were also guilty on the netiquette front,
but their userbases were smaller and their interfaces were much harder to
use.
Was AOL really the first such service, or only the
first one that pumped enough clueless newbies into Usenet to make
existing users sit up and take notice?
The influx of users was greater than any before, but from what I've read,
the "eternal-september" issue was actually fairly minor in the beginning.
One of the biggest complaints that I see over and over is how they would
often post things like "me too". Sure, this was in violation of
netiquette but it was more of an annoyance than anything. This changed
over time as more and more troll and spammers joined from all sorts of different ISPs, but this wasn't specifically an AOL problem).
One more thing, it appears that AOL's sysadmins were active users of
groups like news.admin.policy and genuinely wanted to provide a good
service, but of course they only had so much power. (See articles from PMDAtropos).
Archives can be found here:
https://archive.org/download/usenet-news/ news.admin.policy.mbox.zip
Jason
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