Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-04-02 Thread Jeroen van Aart

C. A. Fillekes wrote:

I do not think that the closing of a service that's undergone multiple
acquisitions by actual competitors is at all surprising.  Did the
closing of Alta Vista a couple years ago after its acquisition by
Yahoo! spell the death of internet search?  No.


Well, it's a bit hard to kill off internet searching. Because looking 
for stuff is pretty much everyone's main "raisin d'etre". It's not like 
you can replace searching with something else. You can replace email 
with another form of communication, but searching is searching...


Since quite a number of years altavista.com searches are just submitted 
to search.yahoo.com and some time ago I noticed on yahoo's site the 
words "powered by bing". Does that mean yahoo's search engine has been 
abolished also and is being ran by microsoft (technology)?


In that case the two main search engines of the 90s are dead. Nobody 
missed them though...


Regards,
Jeroen

--
Earthquake Magnitude: 6.3
Date: Monday, April  2, 2012 17:36:43 UTC
Location: Oaxaca, Mexico
Latitude: 16.4769; Longitude: -98.2867
Depth: 12.30 km



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-04-02 Thread Jay Ashworth
- Original Message -
> From: "John R. Levine" 

> Spam sucks, but I've been posting to usenet with my real unmunged email
> address since 1981 and my inbox remains entirely usable. The idea that
> the way to avoid spam is to hide from spammers is so 1990s.

I've been posting to Usenet with my real *cell phone number* in my sig, not
to mention a dozen mailing lists.

You know how many unsolicited phone calls I've gotten in 29 years?

Maybe as many as a dozen.

Cheers,
-- jra
-- 
Jay R. Ashworth  Baylink   j...@baylink.com
Designer The Things I Think   RFC 2100
Ashworth & Associates http://baylink.pitas.com 2000 Land Rover DII
St Petersburg FL USA  http://photo.imageinc.us +1 727 647 1274



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-04-02 Thread Jay Ashworth
- Original Message -
> From: "Jason Bertoch" 

> On 3/30/2012 5:55 PM, John Levine wrote:

> > Actually, it's fine with us that the ignorant masses think that
> > usenet is dead, since it tends to keep out the riffraff.

> +1

+5; September is finally over.

Now, where can I get a non-commercial rec.arts/tech-groups feed?

Cheers,
-- jra
-- 
Jay R. Ashworth  Baylink   j...@baylink.com
Designer The Things I Think   RFC 2100
Ashworth & Associates http://baylink.pitas.com 2000 Land Rover DII
St Petersburg FL USA  http://photo.imageinc.us +1 727 647 1274



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-04-01 Thread Jason Bertoch

On 3/30/2012 5:55 PM, John Levine wrote:

 I thought it should have died when pr0n and
w4rez took it over (in the late 90's)..

Many of the tech groups remain quite healthy.  I still moderate
comp.compilers which gets about 100 posts/month.

Actually, it's fine with us that the ignorant masses think that usenet
is dead, since it tends to keep out the riffraff.

R's,
John


+1



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-31 Thread Justin M. Streiner

On Sat, 31 Mar 2012, John Levine wrote:


Seems perfectly reasonable to me.  The NNTP protocol can be used for
lots of things and not just public newsgroup discussions.  For a company
that has a lot of offices distributed around the world there could be
many applications for it.


Microsoft uses it for support of their semi-public product betas.  I
think they also use it for internal support.


We used it at work for many years for that same purpose, however all of 
those support functions were migrated to mailing lists over the past few 
years, and the news server itself was finally de-commissioned last year.


jms



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-31 Thread Michael Painter

John Levine wrote:


Microsoft uses it for support of their semi-public product betas.  I
think they also use it for internal support.

R's,
John


I just did a quick count and there are ~460 microsoft.public newsgroups.

--Michael



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-31 Thread John Levine
>Seems perfectly reasonable to me.  The NNTP protocol can be used for
>lots of things and not just public newsgroup discussions.  For a company
>that has a lot of offices distributed around the world there could be
>many applications for it. 

Microsoft uses it for support of their semi-public product betas.  I
think they also use it for internal support.

R's,
John



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-31 Thread C. A. Fillekes
USENET is definitely not dead.  I wrote a search engine and aggregator
for multipart articles posted to USENET binary groups over the course
of a year and a half at the largest providor of USENET services in the
world -- just a couple years ago.  The data rates of incoming articles
was just staggering...and growing by the day.

One of the members of my development team on the USENET binary search
engine project had been a principal at UUNET, so I do have a pretty
good idea what happened to that outfit, organisationally.  The details
are unimportant.

I do not think that the closing of a service that's undergone multiple
acquisitions by actual competitors is at all surprising.  Did the
closing of Alta Vista a couple years ago after its acquisition by
Yahoo! spell the death of internet search?  No.



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-31 Thread Rich Kulawiec
On Fri, Mar 30, 2012 at 09:48:58PM -0500, Jimmy Hess wrote:
> E-mail address harvesters (where you get bombarded with direct-emailed
> crap if you dare post a message to USENET).

Insignificant: email address harvesting activity, in toto, on Usenet,
is tiny compared to that conducted elsewhere.  (A few moments' thought
will suggest why.)

> The advantage 'forum sites' have is,   you don't reveal your e-mail
> address to the public when posting.

That's a bug, not a feature.  And "forum sites" lack the far more
important features that I enumerated in another message in this thread.

> And automated spam sending can be mitigated through the use of CAPTCHAs.

Captchas have been quite, quite thoroughly beaten for some time.

---rsk

p.s.  Before anyone says "but *my* captchas appear to be working",
let me suggest this exchange as guidance:

"Londo, they could've killed me!"
"Nonsense, you are not important enough to kill."



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-31 Thread Justin M. Streiner

On Fri, 30 Mar 2012, Joe Greco wrote:


Oddly enough, I'd think that "bits on the wire" are kind of expensive.
Ports, circuits, etc. and those are on routers you own and circuits you
lease.

I can pick up a 4TB hard drive for $229.  And that's currently an
inflated price; back in September, 3TB drives were around $100.  With
traffic rates steady around 6TB/day for the past few years, IIRC, it
isn't too fantastically expensive to store two weeks of binaries.
Certainly cheaper than your average Cisco router.


I would agree.  When I still worked for an ISP, we outsourced our way out 
of the NNTP business around 2001 or so.  Disk was much more expensive at 
that time, as was bandwidth.


While I was successful in the mandate I got from the CEO in 1997 ("Our 
news server sucks.  I want you to make it kick ass.") and got our feeder 
up into the 300 range on the Freenix top 1000, it became apparent pretty 
quickly that the amount of money we were spending on bandwidth to sling 
all of that NNTP traffic around the net, and the $$ we would've had to 
spend on a larger disk array to keep retention times on the warez/por--- 
er... 'alt.binaries.*' groups would have been impossible to justify.  Like 
most ISPs, we didn't charge a separate fee for access to the news server, 
so it was essentially a non-revenue service.  Sure, there were a very 
small handful of die-hard news users who bought their service from us 
solely because our news server was good, but there were not enough of 
those users to justify the continued expense of running it, so we got out 
of that game.


I think we outsourced to Remarq, or whatever their name was before it 
became Remarq, and as far as I knew, some of the die-hard users didn't 
know the difference, or didn't care enough to switch providers.


jms



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-31 Thread Landon Stewart
On 31 Mar 2012 08:55:48 +0200, "John R. Levine"  wrote:


>Spam sucks, but I've been posting to usenet with my real unmunged email 
>address since 1981 and my inbox remains entirely usable.  The idea that 
>the way to avoid spam is to hide from spammers is so 1990s.

LOL yer not kidding.

https://www.google.ca/search?sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=%22johnl%40iecc.com%22

--> About 60,800 results (0.27 seconds)

-- 
Landon Stewart 
Sr. Administrator
Systems Engineering
Superb Internet Corp - 888-354-6128 x 4199
Web hosting and more "Ahead of the Rest": www.superb.net


pgpBnE2GAQeQM.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Michael Rathbun
On 31 Mar 2012 08:55:48 +0200, "John R. Levine"  wrote:


>Spam sucks, but I've been posting to usenet with my real unmunged email 
>address since 1981 and my inbox remains entirely usable.  The idea that 
>the way to avoid spam is to hide from spammers is so 1990s.

So desu, ne.





Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread John R. Levine

It's not pr0n that's killing Usenet, the problem is spam
junk mail, chain letters


I gather you haven't looked at usenet for a long time.  The spam and chain 
letters have followed the crowd.  I can't remember the last time I saw a 
chain letter, and there's surprisingly little spam.



E-mail address harvesters (where you get bombarded with direct-emailed
crap if you dare post a message to USENET).


Spam sucks, but I've been posting to usenet with my real unmunged email 
address since 1981 and my inbox remains entirely usable.  The idea that 
the way to avoid spam is to hide from spammers is so 1990s.


Regards,
John Levine, jo...@iecc.com, Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies",
Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. http://jl.ly



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread JC Dill

On 30/03/12 7:48 PM, Jimmy Hess wrote:

E-mail address harvesters (where you get bombarded with direct-emailed
crap if you dare post a message to USENET).


I've been posting with a real gmail address for years, and google does 
an amazing job with filtering out the resulting spam, with very few 
false positives (mostly badly designed marketing email from companies 
I've opted n to receive marketing email from, and whose spam-trapped 
messages are no real loss).


jc





Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread JC Dill

On 30/03/12 2:55 PM, John Levine wrote:

 I thought it should have died when pr0n and
w4rez took it over (in the late 90's)..

Many of the tech groups remain quite healthy.  I still moderate
comp.compilers which gets about 100 posts/month.


I'm on a handful of not-tech discussion groups which are still fairly 
active.  However, one of them is busy dying as most of the discussion 
traffic moved to a Facebook group.  (I'm also on a number of mailing 
lists that are quickly dying as most of their traffic is also moving to 
Facebook groups.)  We had a thread a few weeks ago in one group after an 
ISP announced they were dropping usenet, and customers of that ISP were 
being pointed to aioe and eternal-september.org as alternates (for 
text-only newsgroups).


jc




RE: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread George Bonser
> How many of you realize that JOPES (Joint Operation Planning and
> Execution System), used by the Pentagon for command and control at the
> Joint Chiefs level, uses classified newsgroups for distributing
> operations plans and orders?
> 
> --
> In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
> In practice, there is.    Yogi Berra
> 
> 

Seems perfectly reasonable to me.  The NNTP protocol can be used for lots of 
things and not just public newsgroup discussions.  For a company that has a lot 
of offices distributed around the world there could be many applications for 
it.  It would also be pretty handy for emergency response for major natural 
disasters, too, for asynchronous communications between people, departments, 
etc.  It lends itself easily to the forming of ad hoc teams and there is even 
access control possibilities with various groups of users having access to 
various hierarchies. It is a great tool that can be used for a lot of things 
without having to re-invent the wheel for collaboration, information sharing, 
etc.

There's nothing obsolete about the NNTP protocol.  Usenet might be obsolete, 
but NNTP can be quite useful.





Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Henry Yen
On Fri, Mar 30, 2012 at 20:40:06PM -0400, Barry Shein wrote:
> Just curious, what's the source of this uunet announcement (as in a
> link or cite, not "uunet!")?
> 
> On March 30, 2012 at 16:41 he...@aegisinfosys.com (Henry Yen) wrote:
>  > uunet/vzb "will terminate its United States Newsreader and Newsfeed
>  > services on March 31, 2012, with no plans to offer a replacement, and
>  > any content/data remaining after that date will be unrecoverably deleted".

it was a written letter to (some or all) transit customers of verizonbusiness.
no, the word "uunet" isn't in there, but that's how i think of them, even
before wcom and mci (and metro fiber).

i was more interested in comments regarding the feed (nntp) side rather
than the reader (lotsa choices, including gated feeds, dejanews/google, etc.).

-- 
Henry YenAegis Information Systems, Inc.
Senior Systems Programmer   Hicksville, New York
1-800-AEGIS-00 (800-234-4700)




Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Joe Greco
> On Fri, 30 Mar 2012, Joe Greco wrote:
> > Those of us still doing work with USENET know that it isn't dead, far
> > from it, but we're aware that there's a certain amount of illicit
> > traffic.
> 
> A certain amount?  Even years and years ago, when I last ran a server, 
> I'd wager porn and warez was statistically "all" of the traffic.

That clearly explains why glorb.com, a text-only transit site, is
currently rated fifth.

http://top1000.anthologeek.net/

> > It's kind of like the way that pr0n and w4rez dominate all the Internet,
> > but this doesn't seem to faze Internet network operators.
> 
> Perhaps because the pr0n and w4rez are just bits on the wire for most 
> operators, not terabytes of disk space on servers we own.

Oddly enough, I'd think that "bits on the wire" are kind of expensive.
Ports, circuits, etc. and those are on routers you own and circuits you
lease.

I can pick up a 4TB hard drive for $229.  And that's currently an 
inflated price; back in September, 3TB drives were around $100.  With
traffic rates steady around 6TB/day for the past few years, IIRC, it
isn't too fantastically expensive to store two weeks of binaries.
Certainly cheaper than your average Cisco router.

... JG
-- 
Joe Greco - sol.net Network Services - Milwaukee, WI - http://www.sol.net
"We call it the 'one bite at the apple' rule. Give me one chance [and] then I
won't contact you again." - Direct Marketing Ass'n position on e-mail spam(CNN)
With 24 million small businesses in the US alone, that's way too many apples.



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Jimmy Hess
On Fri, Mar 30, 2012 at 6:31 PM, Jon Lewis  wrote:
> Perhaps because the pr0n and w4rez are just bits on the wire for most
> operators, not terabytes of disk space on servers we own.

pr0n, w4rez, and other  large binaries encoded with UUENCODE  are easy
to identify and block.

It's not pr0n that's killing Usenet, the problem is spam
junk mail
chain letters

E-mail address harvesters (where you get bombarded with direct-emailed
crap if you dare post a message to USENET).

And the like.

The advantage 'forum sites' have is,   you don't reveal your e-mail
address to the public when posting.
And automated spam sending can be mitigated through the use of CAPTCHAs.

---
-JH



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Miles Fidelman

Jon Lewis wrote:

On Fri, 30 Mar 2012, Joe Greco wrote:


Those of us still doing work with USENET know that it isn't dead, far
from it, but we're aware that there's a certain amount of illicit
traffic.


A certain amount?  Even years and years ago, when I last ran a server, 
I'd wager porn and warez was statistically "all" of the traffic.



It's kind of like the way that pr0n and w4rez dominate all the Internet,
but this doesn't seem to faze Internet network operators.


Perhaps because the pr0n and w4rez are just bits on the wire for most 
operators, not terabytes of disk space on servers we own.


Yeah.. but that's like saying video is all there is on the Internet.  I 
don't know about the rest of you, but I exchange a LOT more email every 
day that the number of videos I watch, but... the bandwidth involved in 
all that email pretty trivial, even counting all the list traffic going 
through our list manager.


Miles Fidelman




--
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
In practice, there is.    Yogi Berra





Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Miles Fidelman

George Bonser wrote:

No comment just a question...  Why did it take so long?

All good things must come to an end.  and for NNTP that end was when
web based Forums software and P2P was invented.  Seriously does anyone
still use UUCP for email?  I thought it should have died when pr0n and
w4rez took it over (in the late 90's)..  but that ended up fueling the
need :)  Who is the Kim Dotcom of usenet?  Lets bust him and move on.

-Scott

I think there is still a place for things like NNTP and UUCP but maybe not as they were 
used in the past.  Private NNTP groups could be used to create discussion boards or even 
a coordination system for emergency response with each jurisdiction having its own group 
hierarchy.  UUCP could be used to move mail and "news" between locations via 
telephone dial if the conventional internet is broken.  UUCP has the advantage of moving 
email for entire domains rather than simply a user.  It could be a good emergency backup 
or used in places where Internet connectivity is spotty/denied but telephone service is 
available.

How many of you realize that JOPES (Joint Operation Planning and 
Execution System), used by the Pentagon for command and control at the 
Joint Chiefs level, uses classified newsgroups for distributing 
operations plans and orders?


--
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
In practice, there is.    Yogi Berra





Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Jeroen van Aart

Michael Sinatra wrote:

active class newsgroups.  As you can see from examples such as CS 61a (
https://groups.google.com/group/ucb.class.cs61a/about?pli=1),


Can someone help out mrshare?
https://groups.google.com/group/ucb.class.cs61a/browse_frm/month/2010-08

The above link and this one are a fitting illustration of what has 
happened to usenet in the last decade and a half...


"systemy" network engineers out there.  I enjoy running DNS, NTP, and 
other system-based network services an much as I like configuring 
routers.  I think running USENET a while back had a lot to do with that.


For the last 2 decades or so I have repeatedly tried to "get into" 
usenet. But every time I loose interest and give up. I am not entirely 
sure why because it can be a great source of information and to communicate.


It's probably a combination of signal to noise ratio, epic flame wars, 
the user interface of many clients and the actual size (information 
overload ;-).


But I am glad there exists something beyond "the web".

Greetings,
Jeroen

--
Earthquake Magnitude: 5.2
Date: Friday, March 30, 2012 19:51:04 UTC
Location: Bougainville region, Papua New Guinea
Latitude: -6.6076; Longitude: 154.5824
Depth: 45.70 km



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Barry Shein

Just curious, what's the source of this uunet announcement (as in a
link or cite, not "uunet!")?

On March 30, 2012 at 16:41 he...@aegisinfosys.com (Henry Yen) wrote:
 > uunet/vzb "will terminate its United States Newsreader and Newsfeed
 > services on March 31, 2012, with no plans to offer a replacement, and
 > any content/data remaining after that date will be unrecoverably deleted".
 > 
 > does anyone on NANOG have any thoughtful comments on this?
 > 
 > -- 
 > Henry YenAegis Information Systems, 
 > Inc.
 > Senior Systems Programmer   Hicksville, New York
 > 1-800-AEGIS-00 (800-234-4700)
 > 

-- 
-Barry Shein

The World  | b...@theworld.com   | http://www.TheWorld.com
Purveyors to the Trade | Voice: 800-THE-WRLD| Dial-Up: US, PR, Canada
Software Tool & Die| Public Access Internet | SINCE 1989 *oo*



RE: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread George Bonser
> No comment just a question...  Why did it take so long?
> 
> All good things must come to an end.  and for NNTP that end was when
> web based Forums software and P2P was invented.  Seriously does anyone
> still use UUCP for email?  I thought it should have died when pr0n and
> w4rez took it over (in the late 90's)..  but that ended up fueling the
> need :)  Who is the Kim Dotcom of usenet?  Lets bust him and move on.
> 
> -Scott

I think there is still a place for things like NNTP and UUCP but maybe not as 
they were used in the past.  Private NNTP groups could be used to create 
discussion boards or even a coordination system for emergency response with 
each jurisdiction having its own group hierarchy.  UUCP could be used to move 
mail and "news" between locations via telephone dial if the conventional 
internet is broken.  UUCP has the advantage of moving email for entire domains 
rather than simply a user.  It could be a good emergency backup or used in 
places where Internet connectivity is spotty/denied but telephone service is 
available.

In fact I once had an idea of using NNTP as the "backend" database for a 
distributed ticketing system though it wouldn't "look" like NNTP from the UI.





Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Jon Lewis

On Fri, 30 Mar 2012, Joe Greco wrote:


Those of us still doing work with USENET know that it isn't dead, far
from it, but we're aware that there's a certain amount of illicit
traffic.


A certain amount?  Even years and years ago, when I last ran a server, 
I'd wager porn and warez was statistically "all" of the traffic.



It's kind of like the way that pr0n and w4rez dominate all the Internet,
but this doesn't seem to faze Internet network operators.


Perhaps because the pr0n and w4rez are just bits on the wire for most 
operators, not terabytes of disk space on servers we own.


--
 Jon Lewis, MCP :)   |  I route
 Senior Network Engineer |  therefore you are
 Atlantic Net|
_ http://www.lewis.org/~jlewis/pgp for PGP public key_



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Rich Kulawiec
On Fri, Mar 30, 2012 at 03:55:14PM -0500, Joe Greco wrote:
> Because NNTP is still alive and kicking.

Of course it is.  Usenet is *still* the best experiment ever run in
the area of scalable, distributed forums, which I think is a tribute
to the vision of its originators (and to the architects of NNTP).
Newsgroups share a number of significant advantages with mailing lists --
not surprising, given their lineage and the observation that mailing lists
have been unidirectionally or bidirectionally gatewayed with newsgroups
for decades.

1. They're asynchronous: you don't have to interact in real time.
You can download messages when connected to the 'net, then read
them and compose responses when offline. 
2. They work reasonably well even in the presence of multiple outages
and severe congestion.
3. They're push, not pull, so new content just shows up.  Web forums
and social sites require that you go fishing for it.
4. They scale beautifully.
5. They allow you to use YOUR software with the user interface of YOUR
choosing rather than being compelled to learn 687 different
web forums with 687 different user interfaces, all of which
range from "merely bad" to "hideously bad".
6. You can archive them locally...
7. ...which means you can search them locally with the software of YOUR
choice.  Including when you're offline.  And provided you make
backups, you'll always have that archive.
8. They're portable: lists and newsgroups can be rehosted relatively easily.
9. (When properly run) they're relatively free of abuse vectors.
10. They're low-bandwidth, which is especially important at a point in
time when many people are interacting via metered services that
charge by the byte.  (Obviously I'm talking about text-only
newsgroups in this point -- of course I am, they're the most
important ones.)

And so on.

---rsk



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Michael Sinatra

On 03/30/12 13:41, Henry Yen wrote:

uunet/vzb "will terminate its United States Newsreader and Newsfeed
services on March 31, 2012, with no plans to offer a replacement, and
any content/data remaining after that date will be unrecoverably deleted".

does anyone on NANOG have any thoughtful comments on this?


Only a retrospective: I was hired by the central networking group at UC 
Berkeley in the late 90s to run the USENET service for campus.  At the 
time, the USENET service was still critically important for the teaching 
mission of the campus, as many courses (especially in EECS) had very 
active class newsgroups.  As you can see from examples such as CS 61a (
https://groups.google.com/group/ucb.class.cs61a/about?pli=1), use of 
these groups peaked while I was operating the service.  (The numbers are 
probably skewed a bit, as I don't know how much of the archives google 
was able to get from before the early 90s.  But still, by sheer volume, 
the early 2000s was probably the peak of the ucb.class hierarchy.)


I was following big footsteps: Chris van den Berg preceded me, and he 
made UCB the #3 USENET transit peer in the world.  Before that, Rob 
Robertson ran the service and he was the one who created the first 
overview database for INN and contributed the code for that.


I enjoyed running the service: It was heavily used and I enjoyed making 
contacts and setting up peers.  Then layers 8 and 9 settled in. 
Commodity bandwidth became very expensive, and demand for bandwidth 
simultaneously exploded due to file sharing, legal or otherwise.  My job 
became less of a matter of running a world-class service and more of a 
matter of "how do we throttle this thing, or just get rid of/outsource 
it?"--a question management would often ask.  I spent a lot of time 
adjusting rate-limits for peers and at one point we ended up putting 
USENET into the scavenger class behind a packetshaper.  An indignity, to 
be certain.


By the time of the economic collapse, usage had declined sufficiently 
that USENET was easy for management to put on the chopping block.  This, 
even though bandwidth had become much cheaper.  My job (thanks to my 
USENET tasks and systems background) had evolved into more of a general 
network engineering position, and I had a surplus of interesting work to 
do, so it wasn't a major loss for me.  Still, I am glad that USENET (and 
NNTP in particular) is going strong elsewhere.  I learned a lot from 
running the service, and to this day, I am still one of the more 
"systemy" network engineers out there.  I enjoy running DNS, NTP, and 
other system-based network services an much as I like configuring 
routers.  I think running USENET a while back had a lot to do with that.


michael



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Brett Watson

On Mar 30, 2012, at 3:47 PM, Jon Lewis wrote:

> On Fri, 30 Mar 2012, Henry Yen wrote:
> 
>> uunet/vzb "will terminate its United States Newsreader and Newsfeed
>> services on March 31, 2012, with no plans to offer a replacement, and
>> any content/data remaining after that date will be unrecoverably deleted".
>> 
>> does anyone on NANOG have any thoughtful comments on this?
> 
> UUNet's still been running NNTP/NNRP servers?
> I had an NNTP feed from them...back in 1995...when you could actually do a 
> feed on a T1 and have room for dial-up customer traffic.

There's a flashback! I was still shoveling news over UUCP to customers in Texas 
in '93 :)

-b


Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Cameron Byrne
On Mar 30, 2012 3:13 PM, "Christopher Morrow" 
wrote:
>
> On Fri, Mar 30, 2012 at 4:41 PM, Henry Yen  wrote:
> > uunet/vzb "will terminate its United States Newsreader and Newsfeed
> > services on March 31, 2012, with no plans to offer a replacement, and
> > any content/data remaining after that date will be unrecoverably
deleted".
> >
> > does anyone on NANOG have any thoughtful comments on this?
>
> This is really about: "What do our customers pay for?" more than
> anything else. Keeping 12 diablo servers running for the zero actual
> customers who use them is ... patently a waste of assets.
>
> one server is ~1 sun-something + 1 large disk-array (at least)... so
> there's some significant savings in power and network ports alone.
>
> plus, Verizon is a Cellular carrier, just look at all of the
> advertisements you see for them, ever seen an "internet" add? or

Looks more like news groups than cellular to me. : /

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-K71MpwCko

Cb

> "usenet" ? (fios doesn't count as it's a move by VZ back to
> monopoly-carrier status, not "internet")
>


Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Christopher Morrow
On Fri, Mar 30, 2012 at 4:41 PM, Henry Yen  wrote:
> uunet/vzb "will terminate its United States Newsreader and Newsfeed
> services on March 31, 2012, with no plans to offer a replacement, and
> any content/data remaining after that date will be unrecoverably deleted".
>
> does anyone on NANOG have any thoughtful comments on this?

This is really about: "What do our customers pay for?" more than
anything else. Keeping 12 diablo servers running for the zero actual
customers who use them is ... patently a waste of assets.

one server is ~1 sun-something + 1 large disk-array (at least)... so
there's some significant savings in power and network ports alone.

plus, Verizon is a Cellular carrier, just look at all of the
advertisements you see for them, ever seen an "internet" add? or
"usenet" ? (fios doesn't count as it's a move by VZ back to
monopoly-carrier status, not "internet")



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Miles Fidelman

John Levine wrote:

 I thought it should have died when pr0n and
w4rez took it over (in the late 90's)..

Many of the tech groups remain quite healthy.  I still moderate
comp.compilers which gets about 100 posts/month.

Actually, it's fine with us that the ignorant masses think that usenet
is dead, since it tends to keep out the riffraff.



And NNTP is still one of the most brilliant protocols ever written.  
Replicated information, no central control, ad hoc group creation.  It's 
really a shame that the Netscape Collaboration Server was never open 
sourced (easy newsgroup management, a layer of user management) - 
facebook or googlegroups without the centralized control.


Miles Fidelman


--
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
In practice, there is.    Yogi Berra





Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Joe Greco
> >> I thought it should have died when pr0n and
> >> w4rez took it over (in the late 90's).. 
> 
> Many of the tech groups remain quite healthy.  I still moderate
> comp.compilers which gets about 100 posts/month.

Those of us still doing work with USENET know that it isn't dead, far
from it, but we're aware that there's a certain amount of illicit
traffic.

It's kind of like the way that pr0n and w4rez dominate all the Internet,
but this doesn't seem to faze Internet network operators.

> Actually, it's fine with us that the ignorant masses think that usenet
> is dead, since it tends to keep out the riffraff.

And that's the difference between USENET and the Internet; we've 
largely gotten our nice messaging network back now that all the AOL
newbies are instead attracted to all the forums and blogs of the
Internet; running a newsreader client is needlessly complex and may
be beyond some of them.

:-)

... JG
-- 
Joe Greco - sol.net Network Services - Milwaukee, WI - http://www.sol.net
"We call it the 'one bite at the apple' rule. Give me one chance [and] then I
won't contact you again." - Direct Marketing Ass'n position on e-mail spam(CNN)
With 24 million small businesses in the US alone, that's way too many apples.



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread John Levine
>> I thought it should have died when pr0n and
>> w4rez took it over (in the late 90's).. 

Many of the tech groups remain quite healthy.  I still moderate
comp.compilers which gets about 100 posts/month.

Actually, it's fine with us that the ignorant masses think that usenet
is dead, since it tends to keep out the riffraff.

R's,
John



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Jay Ashworth
- Original Message -
> From: "K. Scott Bethke" 

> No comment just a question... Why did it take so long?
> 
> All good things must come to an end. and for NNTP that end was when
> web based Forums software and P2P was invented. Seriously does anyone
> still use UUCP for email? 

Yeah, that has nothing to do with whether Usenet is useful.

Nobody (to speak of) has used UUCP for *Usenet* since about 1997 or 8.

> I thought it should have died when pr0n and
> w4rez took it over (in the late 90's).. 

And yet, I was a fairly active participant in several tech and rec groups 
in 96 and 02-04ish, and it seemed perfectly serviceable to me.

Cheers,
-- jra
-- 
Jay R. Ashworth  Baylink   j...@baylink.com
Designer The Things I Think   RFC 2100
Ashworth & Associates http://baylink.pitas.com 2000 Land Rover DII
St Petersburg FL USA  http://photo.imageinc.us +1 727 647 1274



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread K. Scott Bethke


On Mar 30, 2012, at 4:41 PM, Henry Yen wrote:

> uunet/vzb "will terminate its United States Newsreader and Newsfeed
> services on March 31, 2012

> 
> does anyone on NANOG have any thoughtful comments on this?

No comment just a question...  Why did it take so long?  

All good things must come to an end.  and for NNTP that end was when web based 
Forums software and P2P was invented.  Seriously does anyone still use UUCP for 
email?  I thought it should have died when pr0n and w4rez took it over (in the 
late 90's)..  but that ended up fueling the need :)  Who is the Kim Dotcom of 
usenet?  Lets bust him and move on.

-Scott


Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Joe Greco
> On 3/30/2012 4:41 PM, Henry Yen wrote:
> > uunet/vzb "will terminate its United States Newsreader and Newsfeed
> > services on March 31, 2012, with no plans to offer a replacement, and
> > any content/data remaining after that date will be unrecoverably deleted".
> >
> > does anyone on NANOG have any thoughtful comments on this?
>
> Obsolete protocol is obsolete?

Guessing: you mean ipv4?

Because NNTP is still alive and kicking.

... JG
-- 
Joe Greco - sol.net Network Services - Milwaukee, WI - http://www.sol.net
"We call it the 'one bite at the apple' rule. Give me one chance [and] then I
won't contact you again." - Direct Marketing Ass'n position on e-mail spam(CNN)
With 24 million small businesses in the US alone, that's way too many apples.



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Alex Ryu
Less, and less people keep using Usenet...
A lot of people just use Search Engine, Web download, P2P...
I guess given the traffic and data too stored, it may not be useful for the
effort to keep Usenet service running.

Alex


On Fri, Mar 30, 2012 at 3:41 PM, Henry Yen  wrote:

> uunet/vzb "will terminate its United States Newsreader and Newsfeed
> services on March 31, 2012, with no plans to offer a replacement, and
> any content/data remaining after that date will be unrecoverably deleted".
>
> does anyone on NANOG have any thoughtful comments on this?
>
> --
> Henry YenAegis Information
> Systems, Inc.
> Senior Systems Programmer   Hicksville, New York
>1-800-AEGIS-00
> (800-234-4700)
>
>
>


Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Andrew D Kirch

On 3/30/2012 4:41 PM, Henry Yen wrote:

uunet/vzb "will terminate its United States Newsreader and Newsfeed
services on March 31, 2012, with no plans to offer a replacement, and
any content/data remaining after that date will be unrecoverably deleted".

does anyone on NANOG have any thoughtful comments on this?


Obsolete protocol is obsolete?

Andrew



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Joe Greco
> On Fri, 30 Mar 2012, Henry Yen wrote:
> > uunet/vzb "will terminate its United States Newsreader and Newsfeed
> > services on March 31, 2012, with no plans to offer a replacement, and
> > any content/data remaining after that date will be unrecoverably deleted".
> >
> > does anyone on NANOG have any thoughtful comments on this?
> 
> UUNet's still been running NNTP/NNRP servers?
> I had an NNTP feed from them...back in 1995...when you could actually do a 
> feed on a T1 and have room for dial-up customer traffic.

UUNet hasn't been relevant to USENET for many, many, many years.

... JG
-- 
Joe Greco - sol.net Network Services - Milwaukee, WI - http://www.sol.net
"We call it the 'one bite at the apple' rule. Give me one chance [and] then I
won't contact you again." - Direct Marketing Ass'n position on e-mail spam(CNN)
With 24 million small businesses in the US alone, that's way too many apples.



Re: uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Jon Lewis

On Fri, 30 Mar 2012, Henry Yen wrote:


uunet/vzb "will terminate its United States Newsreader and Newsfeed
services on March 31, 2012, with no plans to offer a replacement, and
any content/data remaining after that date will be unrecoverably deleted".

does anyone on NANOG have any thoughtful comments on this?


UUNet's still been running NNTP/NNRP servers?
I had an NNTP feed from them...back in 1995...when you could actually do a 
feed on a T1 and have room for dial-up customer traffic.


--
 Jon Lewis, MCP :)   |  I route
 Senior Network Engineer |  therefore you are
 Atlantic Net|
_ http://www.lewis.org/~jlewis/pgp for PGP public key_



uunet ends newsfeed/newsreader in US

2012-03-30 Thread Henry Yen
uunet/vzb "will terminate its United States Newsreader and Newsfeed
services on March 31, 2012, with no plans to offer a replacement, and
any content/data remaining after that date will be unrecoverably deleted".

does anyone on NANOG have any thoughtful comments on this?

-- 
Henry YenAegis Information Systems, Inc.
Senior Systems Programmer   Hicksville, New York
1-800-AEGIS-00 (800-234-4700)