Hi all, I agree: I wondered too what the point (or better say 'scope') of this list is. I say this as someone who sent multiple conference announcements / CFPs to this list ('CALCO' / 'CMCS' from coalg.org if you're interested ☺). Before sending the CFPs, it wasn't clear whether it is appropriate or might be considered annoying or even spam. So I definitely welcome some criteria, which could be put on:
https://www.haskell.org/mailing-lists/ In particular, I'd find it helpful to have the following questions answered there: - When sending call for papers, which topics are in scope? (functional programming in general? "software"? Category theory? "Math"?..) - Are deadline extensions or further follow-up mails allowed? (e.g. call for participation?) Whether cfp-senders stick to these rules is then a separate issue, which can be solved by blocking repeated off-topic announcements. My personal intention is to advertise, of course, but only among those who might be potentially interested :-) Best, Thorsten On Mon, May 01, 2023, at 14:45 (-0700), Ivan Perez wrote: > Most people are just subscribed to haskell-cafe instead. If you are not there, > maybe that's the one you want to be subscribed to. > In the past I have reported such conference announcements so that the specific > individuals be removed from the list. > Ivan > On Mon, 1 May 2023 at 02:34, Dominic Steinitz <[1]domi...@steinitz.org> wrote: > > I have been subscribed to this list for over 20 years but these days all I > ever see are announcements of conferences which have at best a tangential > relationship with Haskell. Maybe it is time to call it a day? > Dominic Steinitz -- https://thorsten-wissmann.de _______________________________________________ Haskell mailing list Haskell@haskell.org http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haskell