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Forums before death by AOL, social media and spammers... "We can't have nice things"

   soc.culture.scottish      More than just Haggis & overt cheapness      99,776 messages   

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   Message 98,070 of 99,776   
   Fred J. McCall to Mary   
   Re: No posts for 2 days   
   08 Mar 15 04:00:15   
   
   From: fjmccall@gmail.com   
      
   "Mary"  wrote:   
      
   >"Fred J. McCall"  wrote in message   
   >news:t9bnfa5soukmmt2eck20n48us794ltur56@4ax.com...   
   >> "Mary"  wrote:   
   >>   
   >>>"Fred J. McCall"  wrote in message   
   >>>news:1b2nfad5mbd3aajbeitkor7nmlflrjkvms@4ax.com...   
   >>>> "Mary"  wrote:   
   >>>>   
   >>>>>"Adam Whyte-Settlar"  wrote in message   
   >>>>>news:eca7703f-352f-4992-89a2-8bc4281595c3@googlegroups.com...   
   >>>>>> On Saturday, 28 February 2015 10:06:42 UTC+13, Mary  wrote:   
   >>>>>>> I wanted to see if this got posted. I haven't seen any posts on any   
   >>>>>>> of   
   >>>>>>> the   
   >>>>>>> newsgroups I usually check for the last 3 days.   
   >>>>>>> Is this the end?   
   >>>>>>   
   >>>>>> I still drop in from time to time but I rarely follow the threads any   
   >>>>>> more.   
   >>>>>>   
   >>>>>> Its a shame Usenet newsgroups seem to have declined - it was one of   
   >>>>>> the   
   >>>>>> last vestiges of free speech.   
   >>>>>   
   >>>>>I completely agree Adam. I really don't know why it declined. I still go   
   >>>>>on   
   >>>>>a few newsgroups that Ive been on for many years, and some of the same   
   >>>>>people that went there years ago, still post there, but not nearly as   
   >>>>>active. I can only guess that most people who used to post on newsgroups   
   >>>>>got   
   >>>>>tired of newsgroups and wanted a change and they went to Facebook or   
   >>>>>Twitter   
   >>>>>and like it there. Each to his own I guess.   
   >>>>>   
   >>>>   
   >>>> Newsgroups largely declined because most ISPs stopped carrying them.   
   >>>> The other driver of the decline was that too many brainless trolls and   
   >>>> egomaniacs started infesting them.  A lot of us got bored with it when   
   >>>> that happened.  I dropped off for half a dozen years or so, but some   
   >>>> folks just never came back.   
   >>>   
   >>>But its been quite a few years since most ISP's stopped carrying   
   >>>newsgroups.   
   >>>But soon after they stopped, most people who liked certain newsgroups   
   >>>found   
   >>>free news servers. Since my ISP stopped providing newsgroups years ago   
   >>>now,   
   >>>Ive used Aioe for my news server and also Ive used Eternal-September both   
   >>>good and free. Google was free but I never used it for newsgroups. Google   
   >>>groups used to be not bad years ago, but I havent been on them for years.   
   >>>I didn't think it was too bad for trolls on scs but it had its share, but   
   >>>there are groups a lot worse for trolls. You've been posting here quite   
   >>>regularly for a lot of years now. Its not that long since a lot of people   
   >>>from here went to Facebook and Twitter and maybe just wanted something   
   >>>new -   
   >>>a change and liked it there.   
   >>>   
   >>   
   >> The death of Usenet has been a gradual thing and a lot of factors   
   >> played in it.  The decline actually started back when AOL first   
   >> started providing Usenet access...   
   >   
   >Whenw as that? what year?  When I first came on the Internet it was 1997 and   
   >it was pretty popular at the time, but it didnt appeal to everybody. Lots of   
   >people at the time and even now, never heard of it. but the ones who did go   
   >on newsgroups liked it. It wasnt on the decline when I first went on it. its   
   >only been in the last few years that Ive noticed a decline. at least on the   
   >groups I read or checked.   
   >   
      
   AOL opened up access to it in 1993.  That led to an influx of users   
   who had no clue about 'proper' behaviour on Usenet (known as 'Eternal   
   September') and was the beginning of the end.  It took a long time to   
   die, but we could all see it coming.  Prior to 1993 Usenet was largely   
   made up of academics, scientists, engineers, and university students.   
   Every September at the start of a new school year there was an influx   
   of Usenet users who had no clue about proper behaviour.  Once AOL   
   opened access, September never went away.   
      
   --   
   You are   
   What you do   
   When it counts.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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