If you have a problem, take it up nicely with
the list administrator (List Mom).
Today is:
part of CA GenWeb
- Look for unsubscription directions, and follow
them.
- Do NOT assume that hitting "reply" with
"remove" in the subject field (for example) will
get you off the list.
- Don't expect the publisher to remove you
manually: you subscribed; you can remove yourself.
- Save your welcome messages with list
rules and unsubscription information.
- Do not subscribe to lists with an email
address with an 'auto responder' function. This
includes "Out of Office Auto reply" and other
features. Doing this creates a large amount of
wasted email, which can be a significant burden on
a publisher with a large email list. (It can also
cause your in box to exceed its limits and your
list messages will 'bounce' back to the list
administrator... A sure way to be automatically
unsubscribed...)
- If you have a problem, take it up nicely with
the list administrator (List Mom).
- Do not mail a single individual when
replying. The question may be something that other
people are also wanting to ask. These other people
have no way to read the reply, but to ask the one
person the question. The one person consequently
gets overloaded with mail while the rest of the
list misses out. (Now if there's a 'connection'
and you want to further that connection, then
emailing each other only makes sense! The rest of
the list has no interest...)
- Most, if not all, mailing lists require that you
are subscribed to allow a mail to go through to
all the subscribers.
If you post without being subscribed (or from a
different email address than the one you are
subscribed as) your mail will be held until an
admin either approves or discards it. The reason
for this policy is, of course, the internet
disease called spam.
- Please do not reply to an existing message as a
short-cut to post a NEW message to the lists. Many
mail programs and web archivers use information
within emails to keep them together as "threads",
a collections of posts that discuss a certain
subject. If you don't intend to reply on the same
or similar subject, don't just hit reply on an
existing mail and change subject, create a new
mail.
- HTML is not for emails. Please switch
off those HTML encoded messages. You can mail all
those funny emails to your friends. We speak plain
text emails here.
- If you are the one who asks, please consider
responding once more in case one of the hints was
what solved your problems. The guys who write
answers feel good to know that they provided a
good answer and that you fixed the problem. Far
too often, the person who asks the question is
never heard of again, and we never get to know if
he/she is gone because the question was answered
or perhaps because the problem was unsolvable!
- Getting the solution posted also helps other
users that experience the same problem(s) or have
the very same question. They get to see (possibly
in the web archives) that the suggested answer
actually has helped at least one person.
- People on the Internet often get far more email
than they can deal with. As a common courtesy to
do your part to minimize this email, you should
always check the Frequently Asked Questions files
(if available), search the Internet, and search
the newsgroups for the answer to a question before
sending email to a human being. If it turns out
that the question was easily obtainable in an
obvious place, you may annoy the other person and
embarrass yourself.
- Flaming is the act of sending someone an
outrageously insulting message, whether by private
email or in a public Usenet posting, usually
because you disagree with something they have
said. A good flame mixes a razor sharp wit with a
devastating put-down so that the other person will
only make themselves look silly if they dare
disagree -- "The absurdity of your ideas is
exceeded only by the incoherence of your remarks,
beginning with..."
"Flame wars" are never allowed on any mail lists
and can be grounds for permanent removal from
any/all mail lists (RootsWeb as an example).
Again, if you have a problem with a fellow list
member, take it up with the List Administrator!
- Most, if not all, List Administrator's are volunteers!
They have lives outside of the mail list you are
researching! So please be patient! Some
administrators moderate their lists 24/7 while
others check in occasionally...