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"Wolfgang Schwanke" wrote in message
... Opinions differ. There are privacy issues involved. Does profiling ring a bell? Privacy issues in a public forum? Right. Would you want e.g. a future employer of yours be able to search through years of your usenet history and form an opinion on your personality, interests, political leanings etc. based on it? Why shouldn't they? Inasmuch as a person does express those things publicly, why should they be concerned that an employer (for example) might learn about them from that public forum? IMHO, a person who is concerned someone might get a negative impression ought not to MAKE a negative impression. Including all those posts you did while in a bad temper, drunk, or confused? If those posts occurred often enough that they would actually make up a significant portion of an employer's impression, then they would be a legitimate contributor to that impression. And why not? If a person is constantly in a bad temper, drunk, or confused, an employer would probably want to know about that. Again...don't want to make a bad impression? Then don't make a bad impression. Of course you could stop posting at all, but that's no fun. x-no-archive is a good way out of this dilemma. I'm not ready to say there is simply no justification for x-no-archive. There may well be one that I don't see right now. But as far as the "I don't want people to judge me" aspect, that's just BS. First of all, you can always post anonymously. Secondly, if a person isn't willing to live with their public behavior, they need to rethink their public behavior. Telling the rest of the public to "just ignore what I said" is a pretty cowardly way out, showing a lack of good character. Frankly, if I were an employer checking Usenet as part of a job interview or review or whatever (and I'd have to be an employer with a LOT of time on my hands to justify that...the idea that an employer might do this seems, in and of itself, pretty paranoid to me), if I saw a person who was using x-no-archive, I'd just form my opinion based on the two or three weeks available on my ISP (or Google, or whatever). Furthermore, the use of x-no-archive would reflect poorly on the person. On top of all of that, what if those two or three weeks just happen to be the weeks that person was having trouble (bad temper, drunk, confused, whatever)? They've just shot themselves in the foot, because there's no history beyond that to counter-act the recent poor behavior. If you don't want to be profiled, you need to stay off Usenet completely. There's always SOME context for someone to profile you, if you are posting here. I don't think other people have any right to complain. All posters should have absolute control on what gets archived about them, and their decision is no business of others. Baloney. For those that are concerned, I suppose it's nice that Google (and other archives?) respect the x-no-archive field. But there's nothing forcing anyone to respect that field, and no person who posts something to a public forum like Usenet has any right or expectation that their post won't live on forever in someone's archive. You got one thing right: there's no "decision" per se, so no..."their decision" isn't any business of others, being non-existent. You can't "decide" for someone else what they will do. The USENET archives are great search tools and the x-archive crap attempts to defeat that... If the OP hadn't posted at all, it also wouldn't be archived. So what is lost? As far as I know, the scenarios being discussed here are using x-no-archive and not using x-no-archive. How does the "hadn't posted at all" come into play? The OP had a question...they would have had a pretty tough time getting it answered here without posting it. The answers (of those who don't x-no-archive) will be searchable anyway. The answers may not make a lot of sense without the original post. Now, granted, Usenet users are almost all clueless about proper etiquette anyway and insist on quoting the previous post in its entirety (usually top-posting too). But a) one probably shouldn't count on it, and b) that behavior completely negates the x-no-archive field anyway. However you look at it, x-no-archive just makes no sense, not for the idea of protecting one's reputation or anything like that. I can't see getting my shorts in a twist over someone using it, but neither can I see any serious argument for a person using it as a standard practice while posting to Usenet. Pete |
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