Dave, they've got a perfectly good wild-eyed streetcorner preacher
conspiracy theory going.  Why burst their bubble with your clever
"facts" and "logics"?  THE END IS NIGH!  WOE TO YOU O EARTH AND DOG
BOWL, FOR THE DEVIL SENDS THE PENN BEAST WITH WRATH!
 
- Mike V.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dave Axler
Sent: Monday, July 30, 2007 10:12 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [UC] True nature of UC-list


Wilma, 

The answer to your first question can only come from Kyle, not me.

However, I have used discussion groups based at both Yahoo and MySpace,
and can state from experience that they do have disadvantages: Most
notably, there are too many advertisements, both on the listserv/group
pages themselves, and in email one receives as a side effect of joining
the group. Yahoo is especially notorious for the latter -- one has to
locate the special "preferences" page and manually opt out of receiving
such mail. I suspect, but don't know for certain, that Google-based
groups also involve advertisements.


As for the second question, I think it is based on two false
assumptions:
1) Penn is "sponsoring" the new group. 
    Providing host services is not sponsorship, regardless of whether
the group is hosted on Penn's servers, or Yahoo's, or Google's, or an
old Mac 8100 sitting in somebody's basement. To claim otherwise is
analogous to holding the phone company responsible for what people say
when they make calls.
2) A group hosted by Penn is more credible than one hosted elsewhere. 
   I don't think groups as a whole are "credible". What matters to me is
the credibility of individual posters based on what they say and how
well those statements agree with my own knowledge and understanding of
the world. Would your words, or mine, or anyone else's really become
more credible because they were posted on a discussion group that
happened to be on a UPenn server? I don't think anyone here -- including
those with whom I sometimes disagree -- is that foolish and/or gullible,
and I don't think new neighbors would be, either.

--dave


-----Original Message-----
From: Wilma de Soto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Dave Axler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; UnivCity listserv
<[email protected]>
Sent: Mon, 30 Jul 2007 7:21 am
Subject: Re: [UC] True nature of UC-list


True enough.  If I could set up a listserv on any of the servers
mentioned (Google, MySpace, Yahoo) by you and Andy, why didn't Kyle?

Having a "community listserv' with a upenn sponsored URL would lend more
weight and credibility than one set up at purple.com or yahoo or
myspace, wouldn't it?

I were a new resident to University City and wanted to go online with
neighbors, I certainly would think so.


On 7/30/07 1:36 AM, "Dave Axler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:



Yep, and you can get similar free services from Yahoo, AOL, MySpace, and
a variety of other places.
The exact features vary from host to host -- some let you make files
and/or pictures available, some
offer public calendar features for group events, all have some
variations on how the messages are
moderated (if at all) -- but the location of an ISP is, for a discussion
list, generally not a sign of who
"owns" and/or "controls" it.
 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: Andrew Diller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Wilma de Soto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: Anthony West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; UnivCity listserv
<[email protected]>
Sent: Sun, 29 Jul 2007 8:08 pm
Subject: Re: [UC] True nature of UC-list

You can pretty much do it yourself, for free at Google. Google calls
listservs "groups." 
 
http://groups.google.com/ 
 
 
-andy diller 
 
Wilma de Soto wrote: 
> I see.  How much is Kyle having to pay Penn to get them to host his
server 
> and lend him an IP address? 
> > Would I be able to do the same if I pay them to host a server for me
and 
> loan me an IP address?  Who gets to do this?  Must one be directly 
> affiliated with the University or have someone who IS affiliated do it
for 
> you? 
> > > On 7/29/07 7:32 PM, "Anthony West" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote: 
> >> Thanks, Andy. Nice to read hard facts on UC-list this evening. 
>> 
>> Based on your experience, what sort of control do you think the Pope,
or 
>> the Franciscan Order, or Villanova Univ. exercises over the content
of 
>> this unmoderated UC-list, based on the mere fact of its mechanical 
>> address? Suppose the list became moderated instead -- how would that 
>> change the influence that Main Line Roman Catholicism now wields over

>> UC-list as we know it? 
>> 
>> -- Tony West 
>> 
>> Andrew Diller wrote: 
>>> If I may---- Actually, there is institutional affiliation:
Villanova! 
>>> 
>>> For some context, there are two things you need to know about any 
>>> computer on the Internet: 
>>> 
>>> 1. who hold the DNS records for that domain 
>>> 2. where is the IP address of the server located? (what ISP?) 
>>> 
>>> Only large institutions (penn, apple, comcast) 'own' the blocks of
IP 
>>> addresses that each computer must have to participate on the
Internet. 
>>> When you pay one of these people to host your server, they lend you
an 
>>> IP address. You then map a name (list.purple.com) to that particular

>>> ip address, and then people can use your server. 
>>> 
>>> People don't find it easy to type in numbers like 153.104.63.228 all

>>> the time, so other smart people invented DNS (the Domain Name
system). 
>>> Almost every IP address has a DNS name mapped to it to make it easy 
>>> for people to use. 
>>> 
>>> So using DNS, we can address things like email to list.purple.com 
>>> (which is a particular computer) instead of it's IP address, which
is 
>>> 153.104.63.228. Both those point to the same thing. 
>>> 
>>> So, to answer #1, it looks like Villanova holds the DNS records for 
>>> purple. So it is safe to say that there _is_ an institutional 
>>> affiliation for purple. 
>>> 
>>> Here is the record for it's DNS: 
>>> 
>>> ;; QUESTION SECTION: 
>>> ;purple.com.                    IN      A 
>>> 
>>> ;; AUTHORITY SECTION: 
>>> purple.com.             6716    IN      SOA
ftp.ece.villanova.edu  <http://ftp.ece.villanova.edu>
<http://ftp.ece.villanova.edu> . 
>>> root.ftp.ece.villanova.edu  <http://ftp.ece.villanova.edu>
<http://ftp.ece.villanova.edu> . 2006061100 43200 14400 3600000 259200 
>>> 
>>> ;; Query time: 10 msec 
>>> ;; SERVER: 207.245.82.2#53(207.245.82.2) 
>>> ;; WHEN: Sun Jul 29 19:08:36 2007 
>>> 
>>> And here is a GEO lookup for the actual list.purple.com computer: 
>>> 
>>> The IP 153.104.63.228 is located in: 
>>> Country:    United States (US) 
>>> Region:    PA 
>>> City:    Villanova 
>>> Latitude:    40.0369 
>>> Longitude:    -75.3486 
>>> 
>>> (http://www.websitegoodies.com/tools/geoip.php)
<http://www.websitegoodies.com/tools/geoip.php%29>  
>>> 
>>> So, there you are. 
>>> 
>>> -andy diller 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>> 
>> ---- 
>> You are receiving this because you are subscribed to the 
>> list named "UnivCity." To unsubscribe or for archive information, see

>>  <http://www.purple.com/list.html> <http://www.purple.com/list.html>.

> > > ---- 
> You are receiving this because you are subscribed to the 
> list named "UnivCity." To unsubscribe or for archive information, see 
>  <http://www.purple.com/list.html> <http://www.purple.com/list.html>. 
---- 
You are receiving this because you are subscribed to the 
list named "UnivCity." To unsubscribe or for archive information, see 
 <http://www.purple.com/list.html> <http://www.purple.com/list.html>. 
 

  _____  

AOL now offers free email to everyone.  Find out more about what's free
from AOL at AOL.com  <http://www.aol.com?ncid=AOLAOF00020000000437>
<http://www.aol.com?ncid=AOLAOF00020000000437> .





  _____  

AOL now offers free email to everyone. Find out more about what's free
from AOL at  <http://www.aol.com?ncid=AOLAOF00020000000437> AOL.com.


Reply via email to