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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!moe.ksu.ksu.edu!mccall!mccall!tp
- Newsgroups: comp.org.decus
- Subject: Re: EXECUTION of DECUS Standards
- Message-ID: <1992Dec17.082309@mccall.com>
- From: tp@mccall.com (Terry Poot)
- Date: Thu, 17 Dec 1992 08:23:09 CST
- Reply-To: tp@mccall.com (Terry Poot)
- References: <1992Dec2.143046.1@mscf.med.upenn.edu> <lhupaoINN978@lisboa.cs.utexas.edu> <16DEC199216495941@rover.uchicago.edu>
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: The McCall Pattern Co., Manhattan, KS, USA
- Nntp-Posting-Host: mis1
- Nntp-Posting-User: tp
- Lines: 81
-
-
- In article <16DEC199216495941@rover.uchicago.edu>, frank@rover.uchicago.edu
- (Frank - Hardware Hacker - Borger) writes:
- >In article <1992Dec15.174907@mccall.com>, tp@mccall.com (Terry Poot) writes...
- >>Do you know the percentage, by any chance? That's something I've been curious
- >>about from time to time.
- >
- > A reasonable SWAG is that, at the end of their life, the newsletter
- > sub base was about equal to DECUServe subscriptions, also equal to
- > DCS accounts, (total, not active.)
-
- So I guess they get the axe next, eh? :-)
-
- >>Another idea would be to dump DCS and put the
- >>leadership onto DECUServe with the rabble. That would do some good, in
- >>>addition to maybe saving some money, though I don't know enough about that
- >>>setup to know if there would be any real savings to that.
- > Would you really like to see 10 or 20 mail messages a day from the
- > small SIGS, more from the big ones, all posted to DECUServe? DCS
- > provides targeted messaging, via mail lists. RUN DECUS using DECUServe
- > urk, choke, ghasp.
-
- Yup. Put all those mailing lists into public conferences and/or newsgroups.
- (Mailing lists are a lousy vehicle for conferencing anyway.) Nobody'd have to
- read them if they didn't want to but anyone who had an interest in what's going
- on could comment and be heard by the leaders and decision makers. Actually, I'd
- like to see it out on the net where I could access it, too. In a users's
- society, the users shouldn't be barred from any discussion. Conferences (like
- newsgroups) are non-intrusive. If you don't want to see them, you don't have to,
- and you can join and leave them as your interests and current events dictate,
- without having to deal with an administrator to do it for you. And, the traffic
- comes pre-sorted by topic (conference/newsgroup) rather than just dumped into a
- mailbox in chronological order.
-
- People keep using analogies to forms of government. If DECUS were a governmental
- unit in this state, most everything it does would be illegal. We have the Kansas
- Open Meetings law that says you can only have closed meetings for reasons of
- attorney/client privilege or the like, and in a closed meeting, you can only
- disseminate information, not discuss action, and certainly not make decisions.
- Those functions must be done in an open meeting. Also, you have to tell the
- public why the meeting is closed and what will be discussed. It may make life a
- little bit less serene for the governing body, since people are watching, but it
- has sure made our government aware of our opinions. Last time the city commision
- here tried to quietly make a very controversial decision, they had to schedule
- extra public meetings to listen to people (i.e. they didn't get away with it).
-
- And as in that example, making the discussions public doesn't mean that you
- can't do anything until flame wars (if any) die off. The decision makers will
- still make the decisions (in the preceeding example, they still made the
- unpopular decision; many of them are dogmeat in the next election). By having
- the whole process open, the decision makers will know what the members think,
- and the members will gain informed opinions about the decision makers. Your
- point about finding someone to run things is well taken, but if membership gets
- interested in what's going on, you'll have a larger applicant pool, and if
- people actually see inside the decision making process, they're more likely to
- have an opinion on a leader, and if people don't like a leader, they're apt to
- recruit someone to run against him. None of this happens if decisions are made
- behind closed doors.
-
- I asked publicly (here) after the Mitnik affair (when he was thrown out of a
- symposium) for a list of BOD members who had agreed to do this, and those who
- had opposed this. There was a BOD election going on, and I fully intended to
- vote against those whose actions I disagreed with (in order not to rehash the
- incident, I won't say which side of that issue I'm on). Needless to say, no list
- was forthcoming. The only one I knew about was Brindley, and I voted accordingly
- on him, but had no information to choose other BOD members except the candidate
- writeups that came with the ballot. Members have no opportunity to know which
- people vote the way they like, and which don't, so we can't make an informed
- choice on the BOD, the only choice we are allowed to make. LDEC picks the
- candidates, and that process isn't open either.
-
- Again, I'm not picking on individuals, just the system. DECUS does itself and
- its members a disservice simply by the way it does business. DECUServe and the
- net are great tools for communication, but neither is used to facilitate the
- running of DECUS, (even though one is a service provided by DECUS!). Granted,
- these tools haven't always existed, but they do now and should be used
- (especially now that the vehicle for written communication has vanished).
- --
- Terry Poot <tp@mccall.com> The McCall Pattern Company
- (uucp: ...!rutgers!depot!mccall!tp) 615 McCall Road
- (800)255-2762, in KS (913)776-4041 Manhattan, KS 66502, USA
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