Netiquette: Difference between revisions
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'''Netiquette''' is a portmanteau of "network etiquette". It was first described in IETF RFC 1855 <ref name="urlRFC 1855 - Netiquette Guidelines">{{cite web |url=http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1855 |title=RFC 1855 - Netiquette Guidelines |format= |work= |accessdate=}}</ref>. | '''Netiquette''' is a portmanteau of "network etiquette". It was first described in IETF RFC 1855 <ref name="urlRFC 1855 - Netiquette Guidelines">{{cite web |url=http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1855 |title=RFC 1855 - Netiquette Guidelines |format= |work= |accessdate=}}</ref>. It tries to cover the broad conventions for interacting amiably and professionally [[online]]. Different communities have different practices with regards to netiquette - what is appropriate on an anonymous image board is not appropriate on a high-level discussion group about an academic topic. | ||
It tries to cover the broad conventions for interacting amiably and professionally [[online]]. | |||
Some of the core rules of netiquette include: | |||
* remembering that other users on the network are also human beings, and acting in such a way as you would want to be treated (as per the [[Golden Rule]], familiar in many ethical and religious systems) | |||
* respecting other people's time and bandwidth - which can translate into not wasting the time of your fellow users with distractions, and not e-mailing large file attachments which can waste bandwidth of users | |||
* understanding that not sarcasm and humor do not always work well in online communication, and can be misinterpreted | |||
* not engaging in [[flaming]], [[troll (Internet)|trolling]], [[spam (Internet)|spam]] or malicious use of the network | |||
* not abusing the power that has been given - for instance, not using moderator powers on mailing lists, message boards, wikis and other systems in order to silence people you disagree with, or to invade their privacy | |||
* reading FAQs and other documentation before posting, and, on USENET and other forums, spending time lurking before posting so that one can pick up the practices of the group | |||
* "be liberal in what you receive, be conservative in what you send" | |||
* presuming ignorance rather than malice | |||
* not 'top posting'<ref>A. Smit and H.W. de Haan, [http://www.caliburn.nl/topposting.html Why is Bottom-posting better than Top-posting]</ref><ref>Eric Raymond, Jargon File, [http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html/T/top-post.html top-post]</ref><ref>Richard Kettlewell, [http://www.greenend.org.uk/rjk/2000/06/14/quoting.html Quoting Style]</ref> | |||
==Netiquette at Citizendium== | ==Netiquette at Citizendium== |
Revision as of 07:44, 16 July 2008
Netiquette is a portmanteau of "network etiquette". It was first described in IETF RFC 1855 [1]. It tries to cover the broad conventions for interacting amiably and professionally online. Different communities have different practices with regards to netiquette - what is appropriate on an anonymous image board is not appropriate on a high-level discussion group about an academic topic.
Some of the core rules of netiquette include:
- remembering that other users on the network are also human beings, and acting in such a way as you would want to be treated (as per the Golden Rule, familiar in many ethical and religious systems)
- respecting other people's time and bandwidth - which can translate into not wasting the time of your fellow users with distractions, and not e-mailing large file attachments which can waste bandwidth of users
- understanding that not sarcasm and humor do not always work well in online communication, and can be misinterpreted
- not engaging in flaming, trolling, spam or malicious use of the network
- not abusing the power that has been given - for instance, not using moderator powers on mailing lists, message boards, wikis and other systems in order to silence people you disagree with, or to invade their privacy
- reading FAQs and other documentation before posting, and, on USENET and other forums, spending time lurking before posting so that one can pick up the practices of the group
- "be liberal in what you receive, be conservative in what you send"
- presuming ignorance rather than malice
- not 'top posting'[2][3][4]
Netiquette at Citizendium
References
- ↑ RFC 1855 - Netiquette Guidelines.
- ↑ A. Smit and H.W. de Haan, Why is Bottom-posting better than Top-posting
- ↑ Eric Raymond, Jargon File, top-post
- ↑ Richard Kettlewell, Quoting Style