-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 > Some people think the only valid / conceivable form > of community / comms on the net are 'forums'. > Well, they're free to set one up.
No pro-forum argument, but one can see why someone would prefer forums to mailing lists. Some reasons can be clearly identified. And it's true for other forms of communication. Now, I'm just curious: when I post something publicly, I *always* want to make sure it will be available and useful to as many people interested in the topic as possible. Do you? It's not an attack, I'm just interested in real attitudes of real human beings. That said, where do I talk constructively about Tor, and how do I build connections with people interested in it? I won't post to facebook or Quora because those are walled gardens. I also will try to post to where the most-best-top-hardcore experts are. So I end up here. When we post here, who will read it? How will they find it? How they will search it? How will it look to them? The fact is: it looks awful, even in Thunderbird. It's not a matter of personal taste, it's a matter of exact art and fuzzy science called *design*. It's also hard to search. Of course, it is searchable theoretically but why on Earth sould it be so hard when alternatives are present? Archives and indexes are kept on some unattractive and inexciting pages. It's hard to control the feed. I wanted to change mailing settings one day, and simply couldn't do it; lots of people would probably be annoyed by that and just silently marked the list as spam, or do something equivalently unproductive. Everyone is free to post whenever they want, sure. My goal in this thread is just to make experts think of alternative costs. (Or, rather, “alternative revenues”?) > No project has resources to run every comm form out there That's the whole point of collaboration and outsourcing. You don't really have to run (and even estabilish) community. Some people provide this feature and make a living out of it. The more independent the feature of (“the more orthogonal to” if you prefer that term) what you're doing, the more you benefit from using it: you don't have to deal with work you don't like or understand, you don't have to aquire special skills, etc. It's the question of combining effort to achieve the common goal. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.21 (MingW32) Comment: Using GnuPG with Thunderbird - http://www.enigmail.net/ iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJTekzEAAoJEFrbru/RghxvttoIANR3iVQCjvLDQMAfuzh/riUB 8Saf8/g7/Z+mqLs7NDKfiVlLLF4k5VddKj/6YzG4BSNj7ACJGkKMtx+uAiEIRXH6 CblCgOOpHCKPfBBKygpDsYgQv56qp8MGUsuian3m6fypWL6Qw4ikqPhsMU9XNaN3 rChS4/DDNt0LGC01puURDqzQHf2sFc/xuTr/dM4t6kj9jxgdA2Y08TLMYtTjng8H JNhBDDm/fU0ZCIrdQ32yJtWIvx8nvffvTPUuGQeSjiFN34NTGtLcTsj4CD8LvtMv DDDHcAGP/24k0OhXmuuHM/GqyI9SuA43zfHmhLFMyhvh8KbAi+IwNHQhdvpS4AA= =7LCm -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- tor-talk mailing list - [email protected] To unsubscribe or change other settings go to https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk
