Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#18
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Leo" wrote:
That's just weird. You're telling me. When your posts were rejected, were you advised of the specific reason for rejection? Given an opportunity to explain, or revise the offending post? Yes, I was. One rejected posting I had actually intended to be sent to the moderators (who saw it anyway) so I saw no reason to resubmit it. Others, I simply opted not to change my comments, due to the timeliness of the discussion or what not. I bounced my offending posts off a friend of mine, who thought while my rhetoric was a little strong, my posts were not offensive in any way. (He's absolutely right -- I have strongly held opinions on subjects, and am not afraid to express them.) And where was the 'three strikes' rule documented - I read over the charter just after the group was established, and I don't recall that being stated. It isn't stated anywhere. I never heard of it until I received the "you are suspended" email. I'm all for moderated groups, normally - they provide valuable filtering of off-topic and malicious posts. Yes, exactly. .telecom is an excellent example of that, back in the 90's. I haven't read it in years (I'm pretty much out of the telecom segment these days) but in all the time I participated in that forum, I can't say Pat was ever unfair in his moderation practices. Of course, he rejected dozens of my postings, but I never experienced any silly bans. It is silly, really. Anyone with any net.knowledge can have an unlimited number of names, IP addresses, etc. There's really no way to "ban" someone. I could still be posting there today, if I really wanted to. |