[comp.misc] HELP ME

SL747@usu.bitnet (05/25/88)

Reference: 5807@cup.portal.com

In article <5807@cup.portal.com> JJ@cup.portal.com (UNK) writes:
>Poor College Student needs Your Help!!   :-(
>
>Hi.  I just finished my junior year in college, and now I'm
>faced with a major problem.  I can't afford to pay for my senior
>year.  I've tried everything.  I can't get any more student loans,
>I don't qualify for any more scholarships, and my parents are as
>broke as am I.  So as you can see, I've got a major problem.  But
>as far as I can see, there is only one solution, to go forward.
>I've come along way, and there is no chance in hell that I'm going
>to drop out now!  I'm not a quiter, and I'm not going to give up.
>  [ I'm sure that everyone knows the rest of the message by now ]
>  [ Rest of garbage wasted ]

[*FLAME THROWER ON FULL*]

        I can not believe what an asinine thing you did by sending a
message like you have over the last few days.  Just on the 24th of
May you sent that one message to atleast 22 Newsgroups.  With the cost
it would take some people to download just that one message would much
out-weigh any chance of getting money from almost anybody on the Usenet
that has any sense about them.
        I for one would never send money to someone that would resort to
such feable attempts such as you have.  You have reminded me of someone that
would try to scam money from the welfare services, even when you are not in
need of the money.  You are just taking advantage of a service that is
available.  You obviously have enough money to be able to get on the computer
everyday and send that same damn message.  If you are just trying to get
responses like this one, you are accomplishing what you set out to do.
        And besides, what makes you feel that you are so much more special than
anybody else that people should send you money and not send it to somebody else

jadler@eleazar.dartmouth.edu (Josh Adler) (05/26/88)

In article <034449.2147405664@cc.usu.edu> SL747@usu.bitnet writes:
>You obviously have enough money to be able to get on the computer
>everyday and send that same damn message.

Talk about a way to waste a flame and lots of our stupid time!
First off, if you were so bloody concerned about spending money on
the net, you could have merely e-mailed him a response, Instead,
you waste my time and more net money by posting this piece of idiotic
babble to five newsgroups. Pretty hypocritical.

And second, just because he has access to the net doesn't mean he has
the money to pay for it. Many colleges allow access to the net and posting
FREE OF CHARGE, i.e., the college foots the bill. Take Dartmouth, for
instance... I'm not spendig a damned penny for this, save for the initial
cost of a computer and a disk, and we even have public terminals for those
students who can't afford a computer of their own.

I, for one, found the appeal for small donations to be a rather ingenious
if not downright ballsy way to pay the tuition bill. It's been done before,
costs relatively little, and the worst that can happen is that you're no
worse off than before the plea is made. Not that I'm going to send in a
buck myself (I need all the spare cash I got!), but it IS a viable alter-
native if you have no other recourse and you don't want to deal with the
banks and their ridiculous interest rates.

So blow it out your arse and shut up. If asking for money over the net is
really such a horrible thing, then he won't GET any, will he? QED.

--j--

DISCLAIMER:                              <<<jadler@eleazar.dartmouth.edu>>>
The views expressed above are not to be confused with those of the college,
nor are they representative of the general mindframe of college students as
a whole. They're mine, all mine, and you can't have any. So THERE! ;-)

mwm@eris (Mike (I'm in love with my car) Meyer) (05/26/88)

[Note: Newsgroups have been cut to two that are - at least in part - relevant.]

In article <8577@dartvax.Dartmouth.EDU> jadler@eleazar.dartmouth.edu (Josh Adler) writes:
<In article <034449.2147405664@cc.usu.edu> SL747@usu.bitnet writes:
<>You obviously have enough money to be able to get on the computer
<>everyday and send that same damn message.
<
<Talk about a way to waste a flame and lots of our stupid time!
<First off, if you were so bloody concerned about spending money on
<the net, you could have merely e-mailed him a response, Instead,
<you waste my time and more net money by posting this piece of idiotic
<babble to five newsgroups. Pretty hypocritical.

True - I bet jj's mail box is _full_. I hope portal charges for disk
usage, including mail boxes.

You, on the other hand, would be a lot more believable if you
practiced what you preached.

Me, I thought about what I was doing, and decided to post. But I cut
the Newsgroups: line to at least semi-relevant newsgroups.

Of course, the cost of the verbiage about jj's posting will probably
far outwiegh the cost of the posting. I think that's been true every
time someone did something truly asinine on the net in all cases but
one.

<And second, just because he has access to the net doesn't mean he has
<the money to pay for it. Many colleges allow access to the net and posting
<FREE OF CHARGE, i.e., the college foots the bill.

Correct, some colleges do that. But if you read what you replied to,
you'd have noticed that the article came form "cup.portal.com." A
passing familiarity with the net is required for you to know that they
are a company that makes _money_ selling people net access.

<I, for one, found the appeal for small donations to be a rather ingenious
<if not downright ballsy way to pay the tuition bill.

Of course - but you're posting from a large school, and are probably a
student. You're not expected to have any concept of what's really
involved in dealing with something in the real world, like the net.

<If asking for money over the net is
<really such a horrible thing, then he won't GET any, will he? QED.

Well, jj has managed to save some money he otherwise would have spent.
I have it on good authority that his account on cup.portal.com has
been trimmed of privs - if not terminated completely.

On the other hand, he may have cost himself more money than he saved
or got through the mail (anyone care to admit that they sent this guy
money?) in disk charges for the flames he so richly deserves for what
he did.

There have been a _lot_ of things done on the net worse than begging
for money. There have even been postings to more newsgroups than any
one of jj's postings.

What jj did that was truly obnoxious was post the same message
_several times_, to multiple groups each time. So even though I only
have to "n" any single posting once, I have to do that for each
posting if it's in a newsgroup I read. So he's made my life more
miserable than he had to, and didn't even reach more people by doing
so.

So not only was he a flaming asshole, he was a _stupid_ flaming
asshole. And in public.

<--j--
<
<DISCLAIMER:                              <<<jadler@eleazar.dartmouth.edu>>>
<The views expressed above are not to be confused with those of the college,
<nor are they representative of the general mindframe of college students as
<a whole. They're mine, all mine, and you can't have any. So THERE! ;-)

Not that anyone in their right mind would _want_ your opinions.

	<mike
--
Look at my hopes,					Mike Meyer
Look at my dreams.					mwm@berkeley.edu
The currency we've spent,				ucbvax!mwm
I love you. You pay my rent.				mwm@ucbjade.BITNET

faustus@ic.Berkeley.EDU (Wayne A. Christopher) (05/26/88)

If you don't like JJ's postings, just send a letter to postmaster@cup,
warning of what may happen if this sort of thing continues.  If they
get enough mail they may wise up and put some restrictions on their
users.

	Wayne

urjlew@ecsvax.UUCP (Rostyk Lewyckyj) (05/27/88)

I think that you all should not flame this poor misguided
young man. Consider the initiative which he displays.
 Certainly he has missed his calling. He should not be pursuing
a carreer in computer science. He seems to have the necessary
qualities for several other honoured, glamourous and well
respected , nay admired , carrers in these United States:
  Politician,  TV evangelist, Adverising executive, Stock broker

Customer_Portal_Service@cup.portal.com (05/27/88)

We at Portal have decided to help JJ save money for college by terminating
his account.  We figure that the $10/month that he will be able to save
will pay for a year at Harvard in about 150 years.  This seems about
right.

bturner@hpcvlx.HP.COM (Bill Turner) (06/01/88)

I wish to extend a sincere THANK YOU to the folks at Portal, for blocking
any more junk from this person.

--Bill Turner

bill@isl.Stanford.EDU (Bill Moore) (06/01/88)

In article <10317@agate.BERKELEY.EDU> mwm@eris (Mike (I'm in love with my car) Meyer) writes:
>Of course - but you're posting from a large school, and are probably a
>student. You're not expected to have any concept of what's really
>involved in dealing with something in the real world, like the net.

You think a bunch of people arguing over a computer without seeing
each other and having the nerve to say nasty things they never would
if they had to do it in person constitutes reality? As far as I can
tell, the so-called "real world" is a farce. What you call real I call
people worrying about money and not being nice to people. Any world which
is real must have love in it. And we're pretty short on that these days,
all around.

					     Bill

thad@cup.portal.com (06/09/88)

As more of the world enters the "Information Age", abuses such as those
typified by "J-J" are inevitable.

Guidelines, suggestions, and "Gentlemen's Use" of the net notwithstanding,
from what I've seen during the past 3 years Usenet is an anarchy.

(Some) people will ALWAYS break laws.  Posted freeway speed limits in this
area are 55MPH, yet the commute traffic averages 70+MPH (before 8AM).

In a free society, people have to be accountable for their OWN actions and
deeds.  Let's not re-hash "prior restraint" again.

For the record, PORTAL does REQUIRE a signed contract of all its subscribers
(which provides more traceability than I've seen at several *.EDU sites).

root@uisc1.UUCP (Super user) (06/10/88)

In article <1101@micomvax.UUCP>, ray@micomvax.UUCP (Ray Dunn) writes:
> 
> Why should we as a community, allow individual sites to profit from this
> otherwise altruistic network while showing *no* control over how their
> customers use it.
> 
> It would not seem unreasonable for an organisation profitting *directly*
> from USENET to at least be required to monitor the output from their
> fee-paying customers (and to be charged by the USENET community for their
> use ???).

Great idea! Have you sent in your money yet? Oh, I see. That is supposed to
apply only to public access systems but not to you, right?

> How about a filter to look for excessive posting or cross-posting which
> would cause system administration to be flagged prior to the articles going
> out?

And who would determine what's excessive? Ray Dunn of course, right?

> Censorship?  Perhaps, but we must create accountability.

Yes, I have heard that before. I think there is a group in power in South
Africa right now that's using a similar argument. "But that's different," I
hear you say. Sorry, but selective freedom of expression doesn't work.

> If these articles
> had been truly seditious, or incitement to whatever, who would have been
> responsible? 

But they weren't. The simple fact is that using your logic, we'd have to
shut down the whole network. You can come up with "what if's" to create
any situation, no matter how good and secure the network was, so the only
real alternative is to shut down the network. And frankly, I like the network
as it is. Well, there IS another alternative. If YOU feel that you might go
to jail because of what someone else posts, either monitor everything that
comes onto your system, or disconnect your newsfeed. But trying to censor US
because your overactive imagination envisions you charged with treason ain't
the answer.

> Who knows?  I know *I* don't want to lose my net feed because my management
> decides the legal risks are not worth it, or that they don't want to pay
> for this potentially hazardous dribble.

And presumably you wouldn't want your potentially hazardous dribble censored
either. So what we've reduced your dribble to is that you want others to
censor (or preferably delete entirely) their users, but you don't want your
management to do the same to you.

You know what people are called that engage in that kind of double-talk?
Hypocrites!

> Normally there is a *reasonable* level of accountability because the posters
> are employees, or students, of the host site's administration.  With public
> access sites, there is virtually no implied restraint.

There clearly isn't in a commercial environment either, or at least nobody
censored your post, did they?

> How about *all* users being required to sign a contract acknowledging their
> legal obligations, plus a few additional obligations and responsibilities
> that we as a network community could stipulate?

Okay, and how about fingerprinting them while we're about it. Even better,
though, since we're assuming everybody is potentially guilty even before they
do something wrong, why don't we just throw'em all in jail right away and
throw away the key. At least we'll know that they won't post something Ray
Dunn won't find offensive.

What would you Canadians do without government intervention?

maddoxt@novavax.UUCP (Thomas Maddox) (06/13/88)

In article <6380@cup.portal.com> thad@cup.portal.com writes:
>
>Guidelines, suggestions, and "Gentlemen's Use" of the net notwithstanding,
>from what I've seen during the past 3 years Usenet is an anarchy.

	Near enough to be fun, anyway.  If Prince Kropotkin were
around, he'd be online.

ruthb@blic.BLI.COM (Ruth Bevan) (06/14/88)

In article <64@uisc1.UUCP>, root@uisc1.UUCP (Super user) writes:

> What would you Canadians do without government intervention?

This statement served to negate what up until then I had considered
an excelllent posting! Censorship in any form is unacceptable to
the thinking individual and smacks of fear and the need to control.
I agree with the parallels drawn to South Africa, but this last line
totally lost me. I am an American, who spent years living in Toronto.
While Canada is no Utopia, I assure you they see a lot less of government
intervention than we do. Their news isn't censored to give an unbelievable
pro-American slant on all international issues, and their bureaucracy
serves, not rules. I fail completely to understand the relevancy of this
statement, which may constitute me a member of Einstein's "majority
of the stupid", if so I'd appreciate having explained what I obviously
missed.






********************************************************************************

Despite what you think, a lobotomy would serve no useful purpose!

********************************************************************************

wnp@dcs.UUCP (Wolf N. Paul) (06/14/88)

In article <386@blic.BLI.COM> ruthb@blic.BLI.COM (Ruth Bevan) writes:
>While Canada is no Utopia, I assure you they see a lot less of government
>intervention than we do. Their news isn't censored to give an unbelievable
>pro-American slant on all international issues, ...

I fail to see any pro-American slant in news reporting in this country,
as it relates to Iran/Contra, Panama, etc.

If anything, the news media in this country seem to always assume the worst
motives for anything the administration does, and the government seems helpless
to change that.

While I do not favor an attitude of "My country, right or wrong", the current
tendency to assume "My country always wrong" is a bit shortsighted.

I do agree with Ruth however that the comment about government intervention
was an unwarranted snide remark -- unfortunately typical for the lack of
courtesy on this network.
-- 
Wolf N. Paul * 3387 Sam Rayburn Run * Carrollton TX 75007 * (214) 306-9101
UUCP:     ihnp4!killer!dcs!wnp                 ESL: 62832882
DOMAIN:   wnp@dcs.UUCP                         TLX: 910-280-0585 EES PLANO UD

adf@uisc1.UUCP (Andre Franklin) (06/15/88)

In article <386@blic.BLI.COM>, ruthb@blic.BLI.COM (Ruth Bevan) writes:
> In article <64@uisc1.UUCP>, root@uisc1.UUCP (Super user) writes:
> 
> > What would you Canadians do without government intervention?
> 
> This statement served to negate what up until then I had considered
> an excelllent posting!

Thank you, I think :-)

> I fail completely to understand the relevancy of this
> statement, which may constitute me a member of Einstein's "majority
> of the stupid", if so I'd appreciate having explained what I obviously
> missed.

No, no, no need to beat yourself over the head yet :-)

Canada has a tremendous amount of government intervention, in comparison
with the United States anyway. Remember no 7 day shopping? Remember their
laws on guns? And (one of the biggies) remember how they handled the case
where that Montreal cop shot and killed that black teenage suspect who
was facing him, standing still, unarmed? That same cop had beaten a black
Ghanaen (sp: from Ghana) university professor savagely and without any
provocation, and the department's reaction was to pay off the professor
and to brush the whole issue under the carpet. No investigation, no
disciplinary action, no reprimand, and the cop stayed on the force. I
read that as a clear case where the establishment (cops, government, etc)
can do and get away with anything they want, ie government control, police
state.

max@trinity.uucp (Max Hauser) (06/15/88)

In article <113@dcs.UUCP> wnp@dcs.UUCP (Wolf N. Paul) writes:
| In article <386@blic.BLI.COM> ruthb@blic.BLI.COM (Ruth Bevan) writes:
| >While Canada is no Utopia, I assure you they see a lot less of government
| >intervention than we do. Their news isn't censored to give an unbelievable
| >pro-American slant on all international issues, ...
| 
| I fail to see any pro-American slant in news reporting in this country ...


Exactly.

ruthb@blic.BLI.COM (Ruth Bevan) (06/15/88)

In article <80@uisc1.UUCP>, adf@uisc1.UUCP (Andre Franklin) writes:
> In article <386@blic.BLI.COM>, ruthb@blic.BLI.COM (Ruth Bevan) writes:
> > In article <64@uisc1.UUCP>, root@uisc1.UUCP (Super user) writes:
> > 
> 
> Canada has a tremendous amount of government intervention, in comparison
> with the United States anyway. Remember no 7 day shopping?

I lived in Virginia where there was also a "blue law" and I think you'll
find this true of many parts of this country.


Remember their
> laws on guns?

Canada has way stricter gun control laws than this country, which is probably
a factor in being able to walk down Yonge St. in Toronto at 2:00 a.m.
alone, without being in fear of one's life... Is the same true of Detroit?

And (one of the biggies) remember how they handled the case
> where that Montreal cop shot and killed that black teenage suspect who
> was facing him, standing still, unarmed? That same cop had beaten a black
> Ghanaen (sp: from Ghana) university professor savagely 

I have no problem with accepting this as a horrible violation of civil rights;
however, you may also recall the public outrage over this incident, and how
it garnered national attention throughtout Canada. Is the same true for the
black father of 5 who was beaten to death in a Texas Jail before Christmas,
when he was arrested on a drunk driving charge? How about the deputy in 
North Carolina who shot an unarmed black teenager during a raid on a house
where gambling was going on? He was later exonerated by the county board
of supervisors who consisted of two uncles and his father!!! Racism and
police brutality are unfortunately endemic to all societys, I have to 
observe; however that in five years in Canada I observed less of it than
I did in 10 years in Virginia. The thing to keep in mind here is that I'm
not claiming Canada is such a superior country, simply that you picked an    
area to attack then on that is not substantiated by facts.... Now let's
talk about the near ostracization of american children in many of their
public schools and you'd have a captive audience!!

cramer@optilink.UUCP (Clayton Cramer) (06/15/88)

In article <3939@pasteur.Berkeley.Edu>, max@trinity.uucp (Max Hauser) writes:
> In article <113@dcs.UUCP> wnp@dcs.UUCP (Wolf N. Paul) writes:
> | In article <386@blic.BLI.COM> ruthb@blic.BLI.COM (Ruth Bevan) writes:
> | >While Canada is no Utopia, I assure you they see a lot less of government
> | >intervention than we do. Their news isn't censored to give an unbelievable
> | >pro-American slant on all international issues, ...
> | 
> | I fail to see any pro-American slant in news reporting in this country ...
> 
> 
> Exactly.

Uh, I'm sure Mr. Hauser thought he was being so clever, but Mr. Paul isn't
an American.  (I'm not sure *where* he's from, but I know he's not one of
US.  Therefore, my inclination is to think that perhaps his remarks may
be meaningful when says he doesn't see a pro-American slant.

Clayton E. Cramer

steve@edm.UUCP (Stephen Samuel) (06/16/88)

From article <64@uisc1.UUCP>, by root@uisc1.UUCP (Super user):
> In article <1101@micomvax.UUCP>, ray@micomvax.UUCP (Ray Dunn) writes:
>> 
>> Why should we as a community, allow individual sites to profit from this
>> otherwise altruistic network while showing *no* control over how their
>> customers use it.
>> 
>> It would not seem unreasonable for an organisation profitting *directly*
>> from USENET to at least be required to monitor the output from their
>> fee-paying customers (and to be charged by the USENET community for their
>> use ???).
> 
> Great idea! Have you sent in your money yet? Oh, I see. That is supposed to
> apply only to public access systems but not to you, right?
>> Normally there is a *reasonable* level of accountability because the posters
>> are employees, or students, of the host site's administration.  With public
>> access sites, there is virtually no implied restraint.
> 
> There clearly isn't in a commercial environment either, or at least nobody
> censored your post, did they?

> What would you Canadians do without government intervention?

The points raised are real: Public access sites can add good participants
to the net, but they can also add some real garbage users to.. JJ is an 
example of the latter. With one set of postings he's managed to create a
near forest-fire within the USENET newsgrops.  Being involved in discussions
a few months ago about starting a public access system, one of my biggest
worries about giving users access to usenet was the possibility of getting
a user like JJ who manages to just insert garbage into the datastream.
  If JJ had posted his note from a work site chances are he would have been
fired.  He could have been similarly chastised if he posted from an 
institutional site.  However, on a paid system, he just looks like a VISA
number and all you can do is cut him off.
  USENET is a wonderful system, but it DOES eat resources.  I would feel
a bit guilty about taking money to give someone like JJ free reign to cause
the furor he had and, although it's almost impossible to stop ALL abuse,
a system that takes in money for USENET does owe it to the rest of the net
to at least TRY to filter out some of the worst of it (without unduly
limiting legitimate use).
  It's a minefield.
-- 
-------------
 Stephen Samuel 			Disclaimer: You betcha!
  {ihnp4,ubc-vision,mnetor,vax135}!alberta!edm!steve
  BITNET: USERZXCV@UOFAMTS

timim@ihlpg.ATT.COM (Tim Lorello) (06/17/88)

Would it be possible to move this pro/anti Canadian/American discussion to
some other newsgroup please.  I don't believe comp.misc is the correct
forum.  "comp" does stand for "computers" after all - right?  I believe there
are a number of other news groups dealing with politics.  The comments seen
recently are very volatile and just asking for rebuttal.  All well and good
- just, somewhere else.  Please?

		Tim Lorello
		AT&T Bell Laboratories

becker@ziebmef.uucp (Bruce Becker) (06/18/88)

In article <3939@pasteur.Berkeley.Edu> max@trinity.UUCP (Max Hauser) writes:
>In article <113@dcs.UUCP> wnp@dcs.UUCP (Wolf N. Paul) writes:
>| In article <386@blic.BLI.COM> ruthb@blic.BLI.COM (Ruth Bevan) writes:
>| >While Canada is no Utopia, I assure you they see a lot less of government
>| >intervention than we do. Their news isn't censored to give an unbelievable
>| >pro-American slant on all international issues, ...
>| 
>| I fail to see any pro-American slant in news reporting in this country ...
>
>Exactly.

Try looking at american news from a Canadian perspective sometime.
I don't think american news is "censored", it is just "managed" along the
lines of the current US belief system... not everyone shares those beliefs.

Cheers, Bruce Becker
UUCP: ...!ncrcan!ziebmef!becker!bdb, ...!utai!lsuc!humvax!becker
BitNet: BECKER@HUMBER

wnp@dcs.UUCP (Wolf N. Paul) (06/19/88)

In article <1988Jun17.172408.17658@ziebmef.uucp> becker@ziebmef.UUCP (Bruce Becker) writes:
>In article <113@dcs.UUCP> wnp@dcs.UUCP (Wolf N. Paul) writes:
>| In article <386@blic.BLI.COM> ruthb@blic.BLI.COM (Ruth Bevan) writes:
>| >While Canada is no Utopia, I assure you they see a lot less of government
>| >intervention than we do. Their news isn't censored to give an unbelievable
>| >pro-American slant on all international issues, ...
>| 
>| I fail to see any pro-American slant in news reporting in this country ...
>Try looking at american news from a Canadian perspective sometime.
>I don't think american news is "censored", it is just "managed" along the
>lines of the current US belief system... not everyone shares those beliefs.

Ruth Bevan's posting (which I hadn't kept around, but which is sufficiently
completely quoted above) clearly implies that U.S. news is "censored"  by
means of "government intervention". 

While I stand by what I said about an anti-American slant in the US media,
because that's what I have observed, I admit that others may be reading other
papers, magazines, TV stations, etc, and come away with a different opinion.

I will also grant that the American media are largely indifferent to 
the rest of the world, but that's not quite the same issue.

My main objection was to the charge of government censorship, which is a 
far cry from editorial decisions based on the owner's or editor's beliefs.

I still maintain that it is slanderous and rude to imply that a newspaper's 
or other medium's editorial stance is due to censorship or other insidious
outside pressures, even if Ms. Bevan feels that this makes me rude and
slanderous.
-- 
Wolf N. Paul * 3387 Sam Rayburn Run * Carrollton TX 75007 * (214) 306-9101
UUCP:     killer!dcs!wnp                 ESL: 62832882
DOMAIN:   wnp@dcs.UUCP                   TLX: 910-380-0585 EES PLANO UD

timim@ihlpg.ATT.COM (Tim Lorello) (06/20/88)

I am really getting tired of this Canada/American news censorship topic.  It 
is about as far off the original topic as you can get and is entirely 
inappropriate for this newsgroup.  PLEASE CAN THE DISCUSSION!!  If you choose
to continue talking about this drivel, then at LEAST have the decency to 
change the SUBJECT LINE!!!  That way I can hit the "n" key (and probably 
would not be as offended as I obviously am).  I tried to ask you folks 
politely.  It seems that politeness is often ineffectual on the net.

		Tim Lorello
		AT&T Bell Laboratories

(All future responses will have different subject headings - I kept the
 heading the same this time to try to catch those who insist on taking
 this subject on a wild goose chase!)