Great Circle Associates List-Managers
(December 1996)
 

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Subject: Re: What is the real point of a list archive?
From: Eric Thomas <ERIC @ VM . SE . LSOFT . COM>
Date: Sat, 14 Dec 1996 13:07:07 +0100
To: List-Managers @ GreatCircle . COM, Todd Day <today @ di . com>
In-reply-to: Message of Sat, 14 Dec 1996 02:50:22 -0800 (PST) from list-managers-owner@GreatCircle.COM

On Sat, 14 Dec 1996 02:50:22 -0800 (PST) Todd Day <today@di.com> said:

>One of the things I've struggled with is making a decent index of all of
>my archives. (...)  I'm ready to cave into these  big database people if
>my list  members can access the  data in a  form that I'm happy  with. I
>just don't have the hardware or  software or time to make something that
>will work  well. If  they put  up banner  ads, well,  so what,  the most
>important thing to me  is that my list members can  access that data for
>free, in a nice, quick, format on a fast machine. After all, I built the
>archives  for  the  convenience  of   the  list  members.  Frankly,  the
>archivists would be doing me a big favor.

I think the key here is that you and your subscribers are benefiting from
the  service  provided by  the  archivers,  because  you don't  have  the
necessary resources to provide it yourself. However, this is not the case
for everyone.

To  give you  an example,  we run  a large  mailing list  server with  an
extensive collection of  XYZ-related lists for a customer  (I'll hide the
topic so that the discussion doesn't  end up focusing on the topic rather
than  the  generic issue).  A  web  archive  browser is  available,  with
database search facility. And the servers are fast, as a matter of policy
we refuse to outsource on hardware that we feel is not up to the task and
would give a  bad impression of our outsourcing service.  Now, we're just
running the service, and we don't have any claims to the contents. If the
customer wants to allow the lists to be archived on a third party's site,
that's  essentially none  of  our business.  On the  other  hand, if  the
customer has NOT been asked, it is  up to us to define the default policy
as outsourcing customers  are paying us so that they  don't have to worry
about mailing list  technicalities that they may not be  familiar with. I
also doubt  they want to be  told every time  a person or robot  tries to
subscribe to all their mailing lists.

Now let's  say that one  day we  find this web  site about XYZ,  with the
usual ad  banners, offering  a big database  of miscellaneous  info about
XYZ. People sign up to read up on all the various aspects of XYZ, and the
people running the site collect advertisement dollars. And let's say that
a fairly large proportion of this database comes from the archives of our
customer's  100+   XYZ  related   lists,  which  were   "sucked"  without
permission.  Well,  again maybe  the  customer  doesn't mind,  but  maybe
they'll get  mad. They're sponsoring  these lists  for PR reasons,  and I
think there's a  good chance that they wouldn't be  happy if another site
collected all the  credit + advertisement dollars. It's  not like there's
anything preventing the XYZ site from starting its own XYZ lists with its
own  $$$. All  in all,  I can't  think of  any possible  benefit for  the
customer in allowing this usage of the data.

As a matter of fact, most of the  MANY lists that run on servers I manage
fall in this category. They're  invariably sponsored by some organization
or  other that  wants  either revenue,  PR or  at  least proper  academic
recognition,  and  there  is  always a  browsing  service  with  database
searching. Or  then they're sponsored  by an  individual, out of  his own
pocket, and that person will typically expect some sort of sponsorship in
exchange for the data, to help recover his costs for supporting the list.
This is why  I find these auto-subscribers so annoying.  They cause us to
waste precious time  explaining to customers why their  data was "sucked"
without  their  control  and  taking corrective  action.  I'll  trade  10
spammers for 1 archiver any day, as we have tools to deal with the former
automatically  and  without the  customers  ever  becoming aware  of  the
problem.  Archivers  subscribe  much  too   slowly  to  be  properly  and
accurately detected  and invariably end up  requiring manual intervention
after the fact.

  Eric

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