[tor-talk] Until there's a REAL effing way to communicate, that evey1 can use, I'm DONE

Webmaster webmaster at felononline.info
Tue Jun 18 20:37:24 UTC 2013


On a side note.  Your email title quote "That evey1 can use"    I think 
thats is a great goal..but may never be achievable.  Your asking for a 
process which everyone can use.  Where everyone is comfortable.   Being 
as some people prefer email over forums, and some forums over email.. as 
well as other forms of communication.  I don't think its possible to 
find one fit solution for "everyone"

Take for example people in countries where access to a computer is 
limited, but access to a smart phone is possible.  Sending and email 
would be easier than trying to log onto a forum on a 4in screen.

This mailing list is a good start.


On 06/18/2013 03:50 PM, Cat S wrote:
> Hi Warren,
>
>
>
> ________________________________
>   From: Warren Michelsen <Warren at MDCCLXXVI.us>
> To: tor-talk at lists.torproject.org
> Sent: Tuesday, June 18, 2013 11:40 AM
> Subject: Re: [tor-talk] Until there's a REAL effing way to communicate, that evey1 can use, I'm DONE
>   
>
> On Jun 18, 2013, at 9:47 AM, Cat S wrote:
>
>> I don't want to re-hash _years_ old debates, please read the bug report links and other links I posted to old tor-talk threads.
> Bug reports? Email bug reports? Tor bug reports?
>
>> That will explain why I and many others feel there should be an official Tor forum.
> That there should be a forum I am not questioning. I'm just wanting clarification on what's wrong with email. You asserted, numerous times, that email sucks for this community but never explained why. I fail to understand how reading old bug reports would clarify this for me.
>
>> TL;DR: Newbs won't use mailing-lists;
> Newbs to what, Tor? Why won't they use mailing lists? Personal preference, lack of skill or something else?
>
>> mailing-lists are a entry barrier to newbs getting help.
> Why? Just trying to understand the "barrier" aspect.
>
>> TBB is geared for newbs, yet we don't try to help them in an efficient and meaningful way.
> And TBB is....?
>
>> And I never suggested the mailing-lists should go away, the problem is mailing-lists only help a small sub-set of TBB users, those that don't really need basic newbish help.
> Are you saying that newbs don't *like* email, preferring forum-type interfaces instead? Is there research on this? Or do you have only anecdotal evidence?
>
> Personally, there is enough variation in the mechanisms and functioning of the various forums to which I subscribe that I vastly prefer the consistency of email, filtered right into mailboxes I can peruse without missing a thing. No need to "subscribe" to threads. It just works.
>
> But do explain how email is a barrier to newbs.
>
>
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> I don't feel the need to re-hash all the arguments, like I wrote. Read this e-mail thread for info on why I feel the way I do, and read this bug report (the same one I referred to in my last e-mail): https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/3592
>
> The "barriers to newbs" e.g. is that using mailing-lists is not easy for newbs, I've had newbs try this and none of them thought it was simple or fun, they all complied about the complexity and that it's "not simple" [0].
>
> Barrier example:
> A newb must choose an e-mail client (most newbs use web based e-mail), figure out how to use the client, figure out how to setup e-mail address for themselves using the client (let's not even get into TLS/SSL!), figure out how to sign up to tor-talk, then learn list etiquette (e.g. top-posting) and learn about threading (e.g. how to respond), and then learn how to filter out messages they don't care about (if they ever get that far), lastly, they have to read (or at least open) dozens and dozens and dozens of e-mails they don't care about.
>
>
> Following a thread is not easy, especially when you're not used to e-mail client and mailing-lists.
>
> We should not make it any harder than it has to be, for newbs to get the help they need.
>
> Please re-read this thread for examples given my myself and adrelanos, as to the barriers to newbs. "Newbs" means people new to Tor, and people new to the Internet and to computers in general, i.e., a large group of people that use Tor. A CEO of a fortune 500 company can be a newb, as can my grandmother, or my nephew.
>
>
> [0]  20-something kids in a computer class, and my mother and my older sister, as well as co-workers that I teach to use Tor; I'd say I've tested a ~dozen people.
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