on the cypherpunks mailing list & me
Note: please do not forward this. This is for cypherpunk readers only. - list inundation & splitting - an introspective note - anonymous feedback * * * List moderator E.Hughes has repeatedly stated on the list that he is not going to split it, although the exact reason is unclear (and I don't think has ever been stated). A few weeks ago I posted a suggestion of a possible list split in desperation of the piles of incoming messages, hoping popular opinion would change his mind or evince a proactive solution. I too was very saddened and frustrated by the apparent attrition of list subscribers not because of lack of interest but because of traffic. I am under the impression that there is an extraordinary recent interest in the `cause' from recent press reports, and that a 3x increase in subscribers, say, would mean a 3x increase in traffic, to which a split is a natural solution (like with newsgroups). But apparently E.H. thinks that increasing flames are the fundamental problem. I guess I'm a bit perplexed by this, because there have been knee-deep flames ever since I started subscribing over a half year ago, and I think they are a bit unavoidable, especially given the inherently ornery and raucous nature of the crowd and the `cause'. Apparently he didn't get any significant support for a split from my posting. Anyway, the bottom line is that E.H. is vehemently opposed to personally implementing any list split whatsoever, but is supportive of anyone starting another. I'd like to send out a CALL to anyone who has the capability and commitment to create some new lists. Also, an alt.cypherpunk group would be very easy to create, and certainly does not preclude anyone from staying here. The newsgroup might be more appropriate to much of the traffic on the list and might help relieve it of all the postings E.H. considers extraneous. There are disadvantages (`the Sternlight factor') but on the other hand we're all drowing in email. It really is a pity all the fresh neophytes and enthusiastic souls that are hemorraging or scared away from the `cypherpunks' because of too much traffic that could be channelled better -- keeping everyone that's interested `wired'. We have reached `critical mass' as far as press coverage IMHO, and now is the time to act. Finally, E.H. was a bit annoyed by my message calling for list split suggestions, which gave his private mail box instead of the service address cypherpunks-request@toad.com. My reasoning in posting his other address was that I thought he didn't want the subscribe/unsubscribe hotline cluttered with a lot of list split suggestions. I guess my only consolation is that there weren't too many. So, my apology Mr. Hughes for indirectly cluttering your mailbox with annoying stuff. * * * ahem, well, I tend to post a lot to the cypherpunk list out of sheer enthusiasm, and tend to get a lot of flames publicly and in my mailbox for dancing around especially controversial topics. But my mail tends to be very contradictory in reaction to posts. In particular, its been simultaneously encouraging and very excruciating lately, and specifically I have gotten extraordinarily hostile mail from some prominent cypherpunks I desperately wish to respect. They suggest that my postings have gotten alarmingly out of hand, maybe even to the point that it would be better if I stopped altogether, or even was *barred* from posting. So, I'm rather teetering on a precipice right now in very serious ways you can't imagine, and in the interest of better serving the group and the cypherpunk cause, if you have strong feelings on the appropriateness of various subjects that I post frequently on, please send me some email. I'm enclosing various anonymous comments below to help spur your own. I guess of all the things I do regularly here, to me the most upsetting reaction below is that my `L.D. cypherpunk awards', which I intend in the best spirit to help recognize fellow cypherpunks for their especially commendable efforts and contributions to the list, in what I thought was a completely frivolous, harmless, and facetious way, are considered poor or bad taste. I get quite a kick out of `handing them out', and have gone to some trouble in at least one case to ask the recipient beforehand, and thought that everyone thought they were good clean fun, but apparently not. If I have offended anyone in the past for them, let me apologize right now. One thing I have gone through a lot of trouble for a long time is to forward relevant material. I think this is one of the best ways I have served the group, and it takes a lot of time, attention, and poring through other mailing lists. And in fact I think a major part of future cyberspace will reward this kind of effort in directing raw information more readily. Right now, its not only a thankless job, but one to get flamed over. I've hinted about it before and got strong reaction that even important Usenet postings are appreciated, esp. for some people that don't have news access and also like it as a way of filtering the noise. And I'm very hurt by strong comments below that complain about this. I think it strange when some people complain they have seen something I've posted before. Am I a mindreader? Seeing something more than once in cyberspace is something *everyone* has to deal with. Why am I the scapegoat? The things I foward, mostly from obscure mailing lists, I think are generally *not* found on various newsgroups prior to my posting it. And I am always greatly both amused and annoyed when someone reposts something that I was the first to post to the list. OTOH, though, in light of all these comments, I have decreased my forwarding activity to a large degree lately to some extent because of this critical mail. Another fairly common complaint in the comments is `acting bossy'. I guess this ties in with the cypherpunk awards. I want to make it clear that all my posts urging action are mere suggestions. I guess I volunteer them in the spirit of sitting around a table, saying `what can we do?' and throwing in my own shot. This is also a way of spurring other people's comments. Also, I often make `calls to cypherpunks'--but these are partly satirical. I'm nothing but another string of ASCII characters. Whenever I get out of hand, though, please call me on it -- but quote the text. I guess some people might have gotten especially annoyed when I went from `[x] gets my vote as cypherpunk of the week' to `[x] gets an L.D. cypherpunk award.' I thought it was an innocuous and natural progression but apparently not. One respondent below really focused on my excitement as `causing flames' or `inviting flames'. It seems to me the only thing that truly `invites flames' is a direct personal insult, and I've stayed away from that from my whole experience. If my postings are controversial, I can't really be responsible for hostile reactions. The whole essence of cypherpunk ideology is controversial. Part of the point of a mailing list is to be provocative and get a discussion going, explore all the points. And yes, it leads to a high profile. I don't feel apologetic for any of this. Not coincidentally, some of the hottest flame wars I've been involved in have been over the most basic cypherpunk causes. Some time ago someone, I forget who, suggested we abandon PGP for RSADSI software because of the patent problem. You can imagine the flames that caused. Another person suggested we change the name `cypherpunk' to something less `subversive' like the Privacy Group or something equally bland. I flamed searingly against both and stand by my positions proudly today. (Curiously, these anomalous sentiments have not reappeared after the blaring NYT article touting the *cypherpunks* or even after the recent PGP subpoenas.) I'm also proud to have flamed people like Denning and Bidzos long before it was fashionable. <g> (Seriously, though, there was a time when saying that she had anything to do with the NSA would be branded a `conspiracy theory'. Actually, that's what I flamed her for.) Many posters object to my verbosity. Yes, I tend to be verbose, especially when in an especially excited or analytical mood. But both the English language use and average attention span has decayed steadily over time, perhaps due to `television stupor' and `educational passivity'. If anyone has seen old newspapers or classic writing, `big sentences' are no big deal. I don't feel like apologizing for exercising a large vocabulary or writing complex sentences. Another bone of contention was my analytical postings, wherein I pick apart an article. I don't think people realize how tricky this is. Criticism is a very subtle and delicate art. In many ways it is more difficult than simple writing itself. And I object to anyone asking for less analysis on the list. This is where we get valuable `intellgence' that *demands* analysis. IMHO, if anything, we need more of it -- we already have plenty of Usenet-style one-liner replies. I think its a pity not more people do this in a systematic way. I have not actually always attached much significance to analysis since being on the list. I got the idea that systematic critiques were really fascinating for list readersfrom one I read by someone, I forget who, regarding the initial Newsweek article on Clipper. It pointed out what a favorable article it was for the cypherpunk cause. After that, I realized how energizing a cogent analysis can be and have been making a habit of it ever since. I must admit the technique is dear to my heart. Anyway, I've gotten both positive and negative feedback on my analyses. Some people complain of my volume of postings. I generally give little credence to comments along the lines ``you post too much.'' In a simple way these sometimes amount to ``I'm drowning in email, and I've seen a lot of your posts lately.'' (Well, I bang my head on my disk quota everyday too.) Worse, though, some strike me as petty and meanspirited -- seeming to me to amount to only slightly less rude euphemisms for ``sit down and shut up'' or ``get lost, jerk''. Unless you can point to particular postings that you think were not relevant, please don't complain to me. I simply don't have any idea how to adjust unless you are specific. Interestingly, some of these comments also seem to amount to the strangely paradoxical sentiment `your posts take too long to read'. I think I have gone to great trouble to index and organize my comments to the list for convenient reading. No one is forcing anybody to read them and it takes about one second to hit the delete button. I think this is a no-win situation for me too -- someone tells me to break up all my multi-subject letters into separate posts, but, leaning in that direction, I get flamed for posting too much. <sigh> For me the most disheartening and alienating comment of all below was that there is `no cypherpunk cause' and that my delusions in thinking so are the root of not only all the list problems but personal ones! Perhaps I've seriously misjudged the intended purpose of the list. For me, though, the beauty of the cypherpunks mailing list (which I thought was highly representative of `the' cause, or a least `a' cause) is that anyone anywhere, not necessarily at just the physical meetings in California, can feel like they are plugged in to a sort of club of associates -- a sort of `virtual community' -- and make positive contributions, meet people, yack, and keep in touch with the premier issues of our day. But maybe I've just made a grave, embarrassing mistake in taking it all too seriously. * * * <shew> all this has been rather difficult for me to bang out on the keyboard. (I've noticed that the most emotional and draining prose has a high occurence of the words `I' and `you'.) I hope no one will flame me for this post. I think every 1000 or so I'm entitled to a little public introspection (<g>), to reflect back and try to figure out what was the most helpful to everyone out there. In particular, if you wish to make comments to me or anyone else posting to the list, I urge you to quote sections of the text that you think are inappropriate or offensive or whatever. Unfortunately virtually all the critical comments I have ever gotten never do this, and its exceedingly difficult to make adjustments when the feedback is vague. I generally ignore comments along the lines of `there is a reason people are flaming you,' chalking it up to my e-personality, without quoting relevant material. I simply won't apologize for excitement or enthusiasm for the cypherpunk cause, and am rather hurt by people who tell me I should. One thing for sure: I don't think anyone is getting very much positive feedback for their posts here. I have always sent out a lot of private email in this vein when I see things I like, but nobody is receiving any significant amount of it, from what I can figure out. I am lucky to receive one email response every ten messages. In fact, this is one reason I was fiddling with the `cypherpunk awards' -- to fill a vacuum of positive reinforcement. Please, don't just email to flame. Email when you have read something you really appreciated or would like to see more of. *especially* say something when you forward material elsewhere, this is the sincerest form of flattery. This the absolute best method, IMHO, to improve signal-to-noise and even E.H. agrees. Consider that positive feedback is in many ways the only `payment' for sometimes much time invested. Sort of like T.C. May's signature: ``I put time and money into my posts, I hope you appreciate them.'' Anyway, here's some feedback I've received. I think this is a comprehensive and representative selection. Hopefully this exercise will let you help me and anyone posting to the list in determining what is acceptable and interesting. I'm quoting it all anonymously of course, in classic cypherpunk spirit <g>. There are 5 people represented here, 2 of them supportive, both rather terse, and 3 of them hostile, all rather verbose and redundant. (At times I wonder if 2 of the 3 are members of a secret L.D. Hate Society, but that's just my characteristic paranoia <g>. Actually, I have other excellent reasons to be paranoid.) Truthfully, I have been propelled in cypherpunk list posting in the hope that people's sentiments at large are not represented accurately by my mail, which can be quite ego-shattering at times, and I'm writing this message with quite a bit of edgy desperation and anxiety. If in response to all this I get a lot of complaints along the same `3' lines I guess I'll have to seriously consider unsubscribing in the best interests of the group. <snif> ===cut=here=== A:
Let me be blunt. I consider that there are three specific people which are responsible for any deteriorating quality of the list. You are number one on that list, more than the other two combined.
Many list processing packages allow the maintainer to block certain individuals from posting, or at least pre-approve all of their posts.
Do you get the hint?
I would suggest you go find out what censorship is. If you are denied access to this mailing list, that is not censorship.
B:
I won't respond to any more of your paranoid rants, your florid hyperbole, your announcements of "Detweiler Awards," or your "you really disappoint me" nonsense.
You take this stuff entirely too personally and are much too quick to judge the motivations of others.
Too tiresome for me.
C:
I believe that you personally are responsible, directly and in responses, for much of the noise on this list.
There is no cypherpunks cause. Neither is there a cypherpunks movement. Get these delusions out of your head. There is, however, cypherpunks software.
I repeat, the cause and movement are in your own head.
D:
BTW: despite any flammage you may receive from the Metzgerly, I'd like to express some degree of thanks for the effort you've put into your analyses of the various issues at hand. Not to say I agree with them all, but for the most part they seem sound, and in any case it's nice to see someone giving the matters a lot of hard thought.
E:
It is my opinion that the list would be a better if you put less time and energy into it. I would rather have you learn self-restraint and quality thought and writing than to prevent you from posting.
F:
I guess -- coming back to your postings -- that I'd be more comfortable if you were to quietly compose and send a letter to your congresscritters proposing a correction to ITAR rather than post your theories and anger and fears to the safe cypherpunks audience.
G:
1. No awards. If you wish to congratulate someone, do so privately. If you wish to denigrate someone, do so privately.
2. No news analysis. Your detailed examinations are uninformed (witness the Orange Book) and condescending. A text speaks for itself. If something puzzles you, ask, don't tell.
3. No ranting. Your ranting creates other ranting. I cannot offer a specific criterion to determine ranting, but I can tell you that about three-fourths of your stuff is rant.
4. Check your facts. Use a library. If you don't know what something is, do not invent an identity for it. If you don't understand something, it is wiser to ask a question than to create a paranoid explanation.
5. One topic per post. There are a number of people who read the list traffic with newsreaders; it is mere civility to have one thread per Subject: line.
6. Do not reply to Perry Metzger in public. This should be a redundant instruction, but unfortunately I feel the need to emphasize this particular interaction.
7. Listen to other people's opinion of you. A single interpersonal conflict is indeterminable, but when several people have the same complaints, it is time to start listening.
8. Remain technical. cypherpunks is a technical list informed by politics, not a political list informed by technicalities. Learn the difference. Technology is primary, politics is secondary.
H:
From my reading of your posts, you sound:
1. really worked up 2. somewhat bossy (telling cypherpunks what they should do) 3. quite verbose
Meanwhile, I observe the reactions you're getting -- and it's clearly a flame war starting.
My assumption is that people are reacting to your non-verbal message (the 3 points above) more than to your verbal one.
As for being bossy -- read your own posts. They are sometimes arrogant. You sometimes sound like you have analyzed the situation and know what is to be done and you're sharing your wisdom with the list.
As I said, it comes across as if you're excited. I appreciate that. I'm excited too. Now that we've conveyed that information, there's no other use for what you're writing in such high volume. I grant its theraputic effect *for you*, perhaps, but it does nothing for me.
I:
I am writing to suggest that there is valid reason for people to complain about your posts and to hope that you step back and consider that possibility. I don't like seeing you invite such attacks.
J:
It's the [...] journalist e-mailing you. Thanks for posting your response to the Westworld story. I'm much too busy ( [...] ) to concentrate on encryption and digital cash features, but one day I will get around to it. And when I do, I'll be calling you and other cypherpunks for help.
K:
I don't want to write you off...so instead, I sent you a message. I don't think you're flame-baiting the way he was but rather by adding volume without new content (without information, in the communications theory sense) and by showing your agitation without doing anything about it, you have clearly invited flames.
L:
I'm concerned, too. However, a "go out and do this" message to cypherpunks comes across as:
1. preaching to the choir (therefore a waste of bandwidth) 2. officious (acting as if you were in charge when you're not)
Both of these are cause for offense -- not "unnerving", just offensive and therefore an invitation for flaming.
M:
Those sentences sound like they're coming from a wounded person who is trying to get back at an attacker rather than from a calm adult who is cooperating in the stated goals of cypherpunks. In other words, it sounds like you're hooked into a flame war -- and that, alone, sounds paranoid. It has nothing to do with the NSA.
N:
I know the situation. So does everyone else on the list. We don't need reposts from newsgroups. We don't need lectures. We're as worried ad you and some people on the list are actually doing things to fight this battle. Your posts don't appear to contribute to this effort. They might make you feel better -- make it feel like you're doing something -- but it's the wrong audience and the wrong words. The result is personal flames.
O:
I value your work in sci.crypt and hate to see you maligned. I especially hate to see you invite it. Lately in cypherpunks, it looks like you're inviting it.
P:
I read everything you send -- or start to read it -- but when I find a re-post of something I've read on a newsgroup, I get pissed. My mailbox is gaining about 200 messages a day, not counting real work messages. My time is too valuable to waste in re-reading something (often for the 5th time).
Q:
I'm favorably disposed toward you but I am telling you that your flood of information -- both reposts and rehashes of your opinion at great length but offering nothing I haven't already thought of -- have led me to delete your messages with my own frustration -- over wasted reading time, discovering that I've seen this before and nothign of value has been added. That takes time.
Hmmm well to make a short reply to a long post: 1) your reposts are useful 2) splitting the list likely won't work, but yes something must be done. alt.cypherpunk is probably the answer. Most of the "junk posters" would much rather get this stuff on a flee-able newsgroup, than have it inescapably dumped in their mbox. 3) your analyses are useful, either negatively or positively, depending upon the reader's position, but they are not out of place, though some times a wee bit long. Just an opinion. That's about all I have to say on it, though I'm disappointed that you sorely misinterp'ed the "kiddieporn" list posting. EFF just want's to keep people out of jail. We aren't lackeys for the Justice Dept., nor are we in favour of the sexual abuse of children. Either interpretation, by anyone, is simply not warranted. The posting of the list is simply to serve as a means to keep a few more people out of trouble for the time being, and so far the response is overwhelmingly positive. -- DISCLAIMER: This message represents only my OWN opinion, not that of EFF. Stanton McCandlish Electronic Frontier Foundation Online Activist mech@eff.org NitV-DataCenter BBS SysOp Fido: <tba> IndraNet: 369:111/1
2) splitting the list likely won't work, but yes something must be done. alt.cypherpunk is probably the answer. Most of the "junk posters" would much rather get this stuff on a flee-able newsgroup, than have it inescapably dumped in their mbox.
I'd better clarify that. I think a CP newsgroup that is NOT gated to the list would be beneficial. Making this list into a NG would of course be a nasty nasty mess. -- DISCLAIMER: This message represents only my OWN opinion, not that of EFF. Stanton McCandlish Electronic Frontier Foundation Online Activist mech@eff.org NitV-DataCenter BBS SysOp Fido: <tba> IndraNet: 369:111/1
participants (2)
-
L. Detweiler -
Stanton McCandlish