On-line etiquette is a recurring topic on most on-line mailing lists
and news groups. Although some baseline standards of behavior
are reasonably well-established in the on-line community, these
are not universally understood and are subject to interpretation.
The following guidelines are an attempt to summarize what the
author believes to be a consensus of Savoynet members, though
it should be understood that there is probably some disagreement
about the interpretation, if not the content.
- Stay on-topic. The subject of
Gilbert & Sullivan is amazingly broad and encompasses
many cognate subjects. Posts can be humorous, light and
entertaining; or, they may be deep, serious and scholarly.
But, whatever else they may be, each posting should
have a bearing, however tenuous, on the subject of G&S.
- Keep quoted material to a minimum.
You can generally assume that subscribers have read earlier
posts. Therefore, you need not quote extensively in your
reply. Do so only as much as needed to establish the context
for what you want to say. At the very least, edit out saluation
and signature lines. Often, you can get along without quoting
at all.
- Eschew frivolous posts. A frivolous
post is one which says little more than "I agree," "Me too," or
"Wow!" Remember, your post is going to hundreds of people.
Many of them have significant time, space or financial limitations
on the amount of email they can keep up with. While this should
not deter you from making a contribution that you consider
meaningful, you should avoid posts that make no
perceptible contribution to a discussion.
- Shun ad hominem attacks.
An ad hominem attack is criticism directed at a
person rather than an idea. By all
means feel free to disagree with any comment posted on Savoynet.
But, direct your response to the comment itself, not the person
who made it.
- Be Sensitive to Copyright.
Do not post copyrighted material to Savoynet without the
copyright owner's permission. Newspaper and magazine articles
that you find on the web, for example, are almost surely copyrighted.
Feel free to post a link, which others may follow to the source.
- Read your inbox before replying.
If you are behind on your mail, there's a good chance that the
comment you're about to make or the answer you're about to
supply has already been posted by someone else. Discussion
threads take many twists and turns, and it is better to post
one contribution to the thread after you've fully
caught up, than to reply individually to each message.
- Remember private email. Not
all replies are of general interest. Use private email if your
reply is more appropriate to the original poster than to the
entire list.
- Conduct quizzes and surveys by private
email. A request that is likely to generate numerous
short responses, many of which are likely to be redundant,
is best handled by private email. The original poster should
specifically ask for email replies in her original message. After
replies have tapered off, it is then appropriate to post a
consolidated summary to the net.
Other WWW-based netiquette resources include:
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Last Modified: 25-Dec-01
This page maintained by Marc Shepherd
URL: http://www.cris.com/~oakapple/savoynet/manners.html