The Jews in the 19th century were given a neighborhood in each European city. 
It was called the Ghetto. Some of us would prefer to live in a Ghetto where 
people can ask for specific assistance on network capacity or route problems 
and the like. An affiliated, but separate list.

Many of us who have no interest in programming routers (my interests include 
physics and Medieval music) would gladly never post again in the main forum. 
The Ghetto would allow people to post articles about new networks or pose 
questions for help on finding capacity. I would not have delete each day 99% of 
NANOG messages or be subjected to flame fights. Moderators could keep their 
main constituency happy by maintaining a very narrow focus. The Purists would 
be delighted. The overworked IT guy or gal would never see any other post about 
how to extend a 100 gig wave to Mars.

But there would be no marketing of boxes or networks in the Ghetto. No posting 
of I got $1500 wave available between 1 Wilshire and 60 Hudson. Marketing 
simply drives good people out. Just a place where people sourcing can ask 
questions and people who want to help can do so without breaking rules and 
being threatened.

NANOG does depend on telecom sales to finance its real conferences. So, a 
complete divorce is unnecessary and counterproductive given that sales already 
moved for the most part to Linkedin. But there is a wealth of knowledge among 
engineers and network managers on who has what and how to get from point A to 
point Z. Some of those people are willing to share it and there should be a 
dedicated place to do so. For example, Mehmet provided valuable assistance 
which will benefit some of my customers.

-R.


________________________________
From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+rod.beck=unitedcablecompany....@nanog.org> on behalf 
of Eric Kuhnke <eric.kuh...@gmail.com>
Sent: Friday, March 19, 2021 12:43 AM
To: Matthew Petach <mpet...@netflight.com>
Cc: NANOG <nanog@nanog.org>; adm...@nanog.org <adm...@nanog.org>
Subject: Re: Perhaps it's time to think about enhancements to the NANOG list...?

Perhaps the sales, marketing and 'business development' people who've never 
typed "enable" or "configure" into a router a single day in their lives might 
be better served with a dedicated list that is mission focused on bizdev, and 
not operational issues.



On Thu, Mar 18, 2021 at 3:29 PM Matthew Petach 
<mpet...@netflight.com<mailto:mpet...@netflight.com>> wrote:

On Thu, Mar 18, 2021 at 10:37 AM Tom Beecher <beec...@beecher.cc> wrote:
CC back to the mailing list for visibility, since I ate the CC list.

On Thu, Mar 18, 2021 at 1:31 PM Tom Beecher <beec...@beecher.cc> wrote:
Rod-

Please refer to the usage guidelines found here. 
https://nanog.org/resources/usage-guidelines/

14. Posts that encourage or facilitate an agreement about the following 
subjects are inappropriate: prices, discounts, or terms or conditions of sale; 
salaries; benefits, profits, profit margins, or cost data; market shares, sales 
territories, or markets; allocation of customers or territories; or selection, 
rejection, or termination of customers or suppliers.

 I would tend to agree that while most of your posts to the list are within the 
guidelines, there have been occasions where a reasonable person could think you 
might be skirting the line a bit. In this case :

- Your company works as a broker to procure capacity for others.
- You sent an email to the list that wording wise would be exactly the same as 
many of us might send to someone they were looking for capacity from.

I think most would agree this is pretty clearly against both the usage 
guidelines and the spirit of what this mailing list is about.

I would also like to remind you that this list is administered by the NANOG 
organization. You have no authority to tell others to 'cease and desist', and 
insult someone as 'underemployed' is also not well tolerated here.

I have looped in the list admins here. It would probably be a good idea to 
refrain from future messages that are clearly commercial in nature, or that 
contain unnecessary insults.



If only we had some way to segregate out different topics
of interest or disinterest, so that people who weren't interested
in questions about bandwidth availability could unsubscribe
from those topics, and only subscribe to the topics that *did*
interest them...

#AFewDaysTooEarly

^_^;;

Matt


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