[Air-L] Change of default reply setting on air-l
Michael Zimmer
zimmerm at uwm.edu
Mon May 11 07:35:43 PDT 2009
I tend to agree with Jeremy's assessment. While I think the Org should
make efforts to remove messages from the archive if privacy/
confidentiality concerns arise (and should find a host that allows
editing of archives), the Org would likely have section 230 protection
from any legal liability (at least in the US), if that's the motiving
concern.
-mz
--
Michael Zimmer, PhD
Assistant Professor, School of Information Studies
Associate, Center for Information Policy Research
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
e: zimmerm at uwm.edu
w: www.michaelzimmer.org
On May 11, 2009, at 6:25 AM, jeremy hunsinger wrote:
>>
>> A) Briefly, a member of the Executive Committee suggested we make
>> the change
>> based on the following considerations:
>>
>> This will eliminate emails, intended to be sent privately to
>> another member
>> of the list in response to a list post, being accidentally
>> broadcast instead
>> to ca. 2,000 list members.
>> - and thereby entering our uneditable archives on Dreamhost.
>
> actually we can edit those archives if necessary. However... I find
> it very questionable that the group would necessarily be forced to
> serve the mistakes or carelessness of individuals.
>
>
>> We've seen a fair number of these - I'm guilty of more than my
>> share, and so
>> perhaps I'm more sympathetic to this consideration. Very, very
>> fortunately,
>> so far at least, most of the emails have _not_ passed on comments or
>> otherwise revealed information in more than mildly embarrassing
>> embarrassing
>> fashion.
>
>
> I think this is a minor point. we have had few and I mean ... very
> few. I'd say we have 1 for every 10 on the cultstud-l list.
>
>> For that, we've had more than one request from respected - and
>> certainly
>> competent - list members to eliminate such emails from the archive
>> record.
>> Given our arrangements with Dreamhost, this is more or less just not
>> possible.
>
> we shouldn't e doing that anyway, but it can be done.
>
>> All of this raises the central worry that there exists a good
>> possibility in
>> the long run of the list that someone will indeed post to the list
>> a note
>> intended for a particular individual, but one containing very
>> sensitive /
>> confidential information, the publication of which on list could
>> easily have
>> disastrous consequences for the individuals involved, and perhaps
>> others.
>> Worst-case, some of us are concerned that this might make AoIR
>> legally
>> liable / open to suit.
>
> get a lawyer. I don't see this. before this would happen, we would
> just edit the archive. You just contact dreamhost, and they'll send
> you the tar.gz, you take out the message and send it back.
>
> If this is a huge concern, then move off dreamhost to a listserv
> with easier access.
>
> The solution shouldn't be to hamstring the community because of a
> theoretical possibility.
>
>
>>
>> B) To be sure, other points of view - very much along the lines
>> that have
>> now been extensively (and, thank you, very cordially) expressed by
>> several
>> list members - were in play in our discussion as well.
>>
>> And: what was under discussion was a _trial_ run of the change, to
>> see how
>> far the concerns that such a change would dampen community
>> conversation,
>> etc., turned out to be true.
>> (Hence my echoing the empirical sensibility of Nicole Ellison,
>> above.)
>
> a trial run is daft. this list isn't for experiments even by the
> exec. it is the primary means of communications for the association.
>
> we specifically chose against using an announce list back in the
> day, we had that option, to make this an announce-reply to sender
> list, but we didn't because it hampers people's capacity to talk to
> many people at once.
>
>
>
>
>>
>> C) There was, however - and believe me, the irony is not lost on me
>> - some
>> miscommunication across the course of our email exchanges, such
>> that our
>> stalwart System Officer Holly Kruse understood the decision to have
>> been
>> made and one to be implemented.
>>
>> 2) So, while the change was made prematurely - the upside is that
>> it has
>> evoked just the sort of discussion that will be helpful to the
>> Executive
>> Committee in making any long-term decision on this matter.
>> (As someone deeply committed to Habermasian and feminist
>> understandings of
>> democracy, it is clear to me that potential norms must be openly
>> discussed
>> and considered by those who will be affected by their possible
>> adoption.)
>>
>> In light of all of this, I propose the following:
>> a) now that the change has been made, and that voices both pro and
>> con are
>> being raised - rather than switch back without further ado, I
>> suggest we
>> keep it in place for the time-being. This will have the further
>> advantage
>> of giving us some empirically-based sense of what effects will
>> really follow
>> from the change.
>
> No, we shouldn't. It will just stay in place if you leave it in
> place, within a week people will begin to change their norms and
> expectations to the list. I've already had people reply to me
> directly from the list when they've mean tto reply to the list itself.
>
>
> I hate to say it, but there is really no reason to make this
> change. I see that some people might be for it. But i think the
> majority see that it substantially changes the nature of the list in
> ways that detracts from the nature of AoIR.
>
> This is something that should be voted on before it is changed,
> voted on by the members. It is akin to something like founding a
> journal, changing membership fees, etc. This is the main
> communication medium for the organization, changes should not just
> be decided for the organization. A vote at the annual meeting or
> referendum during the upcoming election seems necessary before
> letting this change in place.
>
>
>
>
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