Forum Moderators: open
If you are restricting what we can post, even if we are polite and not denigrating individuals, that is a violation of our human rights [...] Essentially, my research shows that as soon as any human joins one of these Online Communities they sign away their human rights
[edited by: ronin at 10:04 am (utc) on Jul 12, 2022]
I have not found any Online Community agreement that prospective members are required to agree to that doesn't have a clause that is essentially stating the owner can do anything she/he wishes to do.
I don't see Online Communities these days going to such lengths to outline the rules and to allow for an open appeals process or to even have a warning style system, or any of that stuff. These days it is simply "You're banned."
Which rights, exactly, are being signed away? Article 12, maybe? Article 19?
Article 19
Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.
But out here where we are right at this moment is a public venue. I think surface communities have certain freedoms outlined in laws that are specifically related to public venues where public communications are allowed to take place.
Where I have a problem is if I am staying within the parameters agreed to but I am posting possibly radical but not criminal ideas and the owner is so angry at my ideas the owner simply says bye-bye, take that nonsense some place else. I followed all the rules, but one unwritten rule; don't make the owner angry.
the Internet isn't owned by anyone
this Internet is one giant park owned by nobody
like that street corner [...] Nobody really owns that corner
I am referring to an open place, like right here. I think guests are allowed to read this that I am typing right now
Usenet is a worldwide distributed discussion system available on computers [...]
A major difference between a BBS or web message board and Usenet is the absence of a central server and dedicated administrator or hosting provider. Usenet is distributed [...] posts will automatically be forwarded to any other news servers peered with the local one, while the local server will receive any news its peers have that it currently lacks. This results in the automatic proliferation of content posted by any user on any server to any other user subscribed to the same newsgroups on other servers. [...]
When a user posts an article [...] the article is copied from server to server and should eventually reach every server in the network. [...]
A minority of newsgroups are moderated [...] Unmoderated newsgroups form the majority of Usenet newsgroups, and messages submitted by readers for unmoderated newsgroups are immediately propagated for everyone to see.
Source: [en.wikipedia.org...]