R.I.P Usenet: 1980-2008 625
CorinneI writes "In a way inconceivable in today's marketplace, Usenet was where people once went to talk — in days before the profit-centric Internet we have today. The series of bulletin boards called 'newsgroups' shared by thousands of computers, which traded new messages several times a day, is now a thing of the past."
Google Groups (Score:5, Insightful)
Just like MTV is now Youtube, USENET is now Google Groups.
Same thing, different name.
Web 2.0 ftw (Score:4, Insightful)
"Usenet was where people once went to talk â" in days before the profit-centric Internet we have today."
Internet company profits have zero to do with the decline of USENET as a discussion forum. In its heyday, it was the only Internet-wide forum. It's been supplanted by web forums of every conceivable niche. Web 2.0 beat it out, plain and simple.
yellow journalism at it's worst (Score:5, Insightful)
Bullcrap (Score:5, Insightful)
Stupid headline. Usenet is still there. Stupid idiots who are slaves to only what their ISP spoon feeds them may drop off. So what.
It deserved to die (Score:1, Insightful)
The world moved on and left this protocol behind.
Re:yellow journalism at it's worst (Score:5, Insightful)
A rumor repeated often enough eventually becomes fact......or at least a Wikipedia edit.
Layne
Pffft, been dying for years. (Score:4, Insightful)
I worked in ISP support for years and USENET was dying well before child porn was a nail in it's coffin. Probably has something to do with message boards with much friendlier interfaces, or that ISPs never went out of their way to try to explain what usenet is.
Either way, the newsgroup support call was kind of a rare thing, like finding a Yeti or something.
people stopped caring, and now it's going away as essential from an ISP POV. There are still ways to get NNTP feeds, so it's not completely toast.
First rule of Usenet (Score:2, Insightful)
Plenty of big 8 and alt groups get traffic still (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Google Groups (Score:5, Insightful)
Or yahoo groups or Myspace groups or ......
Just not the same thing to be honest. The real problem for usenet and the Internet in general is that it is just to easy.
A lot of the good stuff from usenet has now migrated to mailing lists and online forums but it still isn't the same.. Ahh the good old days.
Uh... (Score:5, Insightful)
From TFA: "It's the porn that's putting nails in Usenet's coffin."
That would seem to fly in the face of everything I know about both human nature and the internet.
For me, the reasons my (once extensive) Usenet usage dropped off was 1) insane amounts of spam, and 2) ease of use of torrents (at least with regards to binaries).
Re:Usenet thrives for those willing to pay (Score:4, Insightful)
You are part of the problem
This article is sensationalist crap (Score:4, Insightful)
Usenet is alive and quite well. Actually I was on it this morning (before I read this article).
The fact that less-informed internet users don't generally know about it is IMHO a good thing.
Re:Web 2.0 ftw (Score:5, Insightful)
Except that no Web 2.0 forum comes close to matching the features that any decent USENET client had 15 years ago. Things like real threading, filters, kill files, etc.
Re:Bullcrap (Score:5, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Isn't it ironic (Score:5, Insightful)
Prohibition didn't work then, and it still doesn't work.
Re:Web 2.0 ftw (Score:2, Insightful)
Web 1.0 and IRC beat it out. No need to blame the current crop of AJAX websites. Other than filesharing and spam, Usenet has been dead for a while.
Don't bother reading the article... (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't bother reading the article. It is a non-interesting opinion/blog piece with very little supporting data.
My own little anecdote, I was on usenet (rec.windsurfing) earlier today. If it wasn't for the overwhelming spam, I'd continue to use some of the other groups as the people who are left are a pretty committed and knowledgable group.
2 points (Score:4, Insightful)
1. the government anti-child porn crusade did not kill usenet. alt.binaries bloat, child porn included, killed usenet
2. if the government is more precise in what they shut down (ie, if they shut down just alt.binaries), then the effect will be counterintuitive: usenet can experience a rebirth
it wouldn't be that hard to remove all encoded material from usenet. just set up a simple rule and restrict by size. once you do that, and usenet becomes text only again, usenet can be reborn to satisfy what made it so great in the first place. its social networking lite
Re:this was never about porn (Score:1, Insightful)
mp3s? you youngster!
Bob (Score:3, Insightful)
USENET will be around for a long time to come (Score:5, Insightful)
Hmm...Giganews and other services are still there (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh, and look, they have all the alt.* forums there too!
So, unless the entire Usenet network gets taken offline..which is unlikely, then no, it's far from dead.
Re:Web 2.0 ftw (Score:5, Insightful)
It's really a shame because as people have pointed out, the tools built into your average usenet client completely blow away most web forums for features, especially with threading, scoring, tracking, etc... Plus, the Usenet is fast, being a simple text protocol with built-in multicasting you can support communities of millions with virtually no drain on your personal resources. Web forums frequently crash and burn when they start to become popular because the centralized hardware requirements and the fact that you have to run a database means that once you start getting more than a few readers per second you have to start looking at specialized solutions or lose your community to database overload crashes and general slowness. Unfortunately, it is this feature that guarantee that any two bit joker with an internet connection could clobber a group with spam.
As it is so often true in life, we can't have nice things because some jackass will always try to mess it up.
Re:Hmm...Giganews and other services are still the (Score:5, Insightful)
Holy Shit! Usenet is dead. For some reason my Xnews, open right now, seems to not have noticed.
Death Of Usenet has been predicted since its birth. Nothing to see here.
Mourning the end of September... (Score:5, Insightful)
This bloke isn't mourning Usenet, he's mourning the end of the September that Never Ended.
Usenet's biggest problems really started when AOL joined Usenet. The other ISPs followed on from that... people said that September ended when AOL left... not so, it won't end until the last big ISP is gone. Then maybe it'll be time for Usenet 2.0...
Commercialism (Score:3, Insightful)
Is what killed the internet. At least what it was and should have remained.
What we have now is some evil bastard child.
Re:Google Groups (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually Google Groups *is* the same thing as Usenet, because that is exactly what it is, a [sic] easy to use web front end to Usenet.
That's awfully subjective. I find the GG interface to be an exercise in masochism.
Re:Google Groups (Score:2, Insightful)
Yes, but without the music.
Re:Google Groups (Score:5, Insightful)
While it might be a pretty modern front end to usenet it doesn't help the fact that the back end feed is slowly being strangled by spam, and now legislation.
Re:Web 2.0 ftw (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:USENET is doing just fine (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Google Groups (Score:5, Insightful)
Google Groups *is* the same thing as Usenet, because that is exactly what it is, a easy to use web front end to Usenet.
Where "easy to use" means "one tenth the features of a decent newsreader, but slower and more awkward". Long live Gnus.
First Ammendment rights (Score:5, Insightful)
If we wanted to don our tinfoil hats, we could come up with an alternative reason for killing Usenet, instead of kiddy porn or the mafiAA.
Usenet may be one of the few remaining places on the Internet that might pretend to have First Ammendment protections. Here at Slashdot there are discussion forums, but Slashdot has some form of control/culpability for them despite any disclaimers. If I were to post the Secrets of Scientology here, the Church of Scientology would certainly be after me, but they'd first go after Slashdot to get those secrets removed. (Of course then they're inviting the Streisand Effect, and they'd have to remember the Wayback Machine, but I'm sure they'd try.) But the essence is that Slashdot is a commercial entity hosting contributed content on its servers. The same can be said about pretty much any weblog out there.
The same cannot be said of Usenet. There is no single choke point for Usenet, like there is for a weblog. There is no single point to send a C&D letter to. Furthermore, it's fully possible that the author on Usenet is carefully anonymous, and is therefore untracable. Even finding the original feedpoint may be problematic, and require serious geek assistance.
On the other hand...
I was there on "Green Card Day". I remember seeing it the first time, then seeing it again in the next group that I followed, then again and again.... There may be something inherently unworkable about mixing anonymity with complete freedom speech. I suspect our founding fathers thought that we'd use our free speech more wisely than I do. I still believe that it is at times important to be anonymous, while at the same time retaining first ammendment protection, but I also believe that claiming those dual rights is FAR more important than Viagra or Nigerian bank accounts. I have no idea what a solution might be, other than to make some "cost of anonymity" great enough to prevent spam, but have no idea how to do that.
UseNet is obsolete (Score:3, Insightful)
UseNet originated at a time when a vast portion of its network was built upon store-and-forward technologies such as UUCP, BITNET, and various homegrown protocols for the smaller sites. If you could do store and forward you could probably carry newsgroups.
Today, everyone has interactive Internet access. That's why no one is scrambling to "fix" UseNet. Today's users Google for what interests them, and they eventually find themselves on a relevant message board. That message board is probably not replicated to thousands of other servers across the globe, because the whole world can already reach it directly.
The only nuisance is that you have to create accounts on all these systems. Hopefully, technologies such as OpenID [openid.net] will fix that.
(And yeah, there are plenty of smaller message boards that thrive specifically because they are smaller scale than UseNet. I've been a BBS [citadel.org] sysop for 20 years, and our community is thriving because everyone has the opportunity to know everyone else without having to deal with a 1% signal to noise ratio. It also helps that we offer both text and web based user interfaces to the same message boards, so we can be equally as welcoming to newbies and old-skool green screeners.)
Re:Hmm...Giganews and other services are still the (Score:5, Insightful)
"The year of linux on the desktop"..
"The next search engine to beat google"..
"Windows is dead"..
"Usenet is dead"..
It seems like more and more people are making more and more outrageous predictions & claims.
I guess with all the noise out there people need a way for their blog to stand out.
If they're wrong its a case of "oh well, maybe next year" but if they're right they'll claim they're prophetic or something and use it to get more advertizing/readers/whatever... and yet nothing changes, the internet goes on.
Hold on.. http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/07/31/1316257 [slashdot.org] OMG!! the internet is gonna end.
Re:Google Groups (Score:3, Insightful)
Or the TV.
When they discovered that it was impossible to extend the hours in a day to allow for more ad time, they responded by removing from their programming anything for which an advertiser was not paying them money and then creating spin-off channels to increase the overall load.
MTV is basically just HSN without an 800 number.
Re:Hmm...Giganews and other services are still the (Score:3, Insightful)
Not when the quality of the comment is to land a +5, Funny.
Re:Hmm...Giganews and other services are still the (Score:5, Insightful)
If you read the article you'd realize the writer was speaking "metaphorically"
it's hard to completely kill off something as totally decentralized as Usenet; as long as two servers agree to share the NNTP protocol, it'll continue on in some fashion. But the Usenet I mourn is long gone, anyway, or long-transformed into interlocking comments on LiveJournals and the forums boards on tech-support Web sites.
Government is just an excuse (Score:3, Insightful)
Usenet takes a fair amount of bandwidth, disk space and such to operate for an ISP. Especially since most of the traffic is binaries.
So when the police said "Hey, we found some child porn on your servers" the ISPs were more than happy to jump up and say "Ok, ok, we'll shut them down!"
To the customers they report "We have had to reluctantly shut down our servers because the government made us do it."
But internally they're like "Thank God! We finally had an excuse to shut that horrendous waste of resources down."
It's sort of like how an company uses "budet cuts" as an excuse to get rid of all the people they actually wanted to fire, but were too lazy to go through all the paperwork.
Re:Eternal September = Remember when /b/ was good? (Score:2, Insightful)
There's really nothing in common between usenet and *chan.
Go poke around at groups.google.com, and imagine that working like an email client instead of some weird google frontend.
Now add a bunch of groups solely for the purpose if distributing binary posts (ie, archives, ISOs, less savory things).
That is usenet. And it's still there. Usually something around $10/month will get you access from a non-ISP provider, around $25-$30 will get you *unlimited* access - and I mean unlimited.
Re:Bullcrap (Score:3, Insightful)
But I think the way Usenet became a massive carrier for warez and pr0n binaries made it a liability for ISPs in a way it wouldn't have been otherwise. The way the binaries groups tend to dominate byte traffic also leads/led ISPs to see Usenet as, basically, a gigantic flow of binaries with some tiny text stuff tacked on. They didn't like what they saw.
You see the same problem with P2P. There's nothing inherently illegal or evil about P2P, as we all know, and it has many excellent uses. But enough P2P traffic is/was pirated movies/music that the whole protocol gets tarred with the brush, and then you have ISPs cracking down.
I know a lot of posters here have been celebrating that handful of third party news servers, but to me one of the big pluses of Usenet was its extremely decentralized nature. Because it was on every ISP, because it was local to everyone, nobody could really control it. It was as close as we get to "public space" on the privately run Net. If everyone's using Giganews, then they're just basically using a proprietary bulletin board system that happens to use NNTP as a protocol.
Re:Google Groups (Score:4, Insightful)
> The demise of Usenet was a long time ago, and coincided with the introduction of the web-based forum.
Uh, no. It coincided with the flood of spammers who discovered that it costs nothing to post on the newsgroups and that most people use their *gasp* actual email addresses in the posts. Now if you post anything, you are guaranteed to be spammed on the newsgroup and off. At least the forums are too numerous to attack effectively and are at least somewhat moderated. They are also more anonymous as you get to use different identities, with no public email address for each one. Sure, if spam were outlawed, usenet might come back, but as for me, I haven't posted on a newsgroup in almost a decade.
Re:Google Groups (Score:5, Insightful)
Google groups is indeed the source of a lot of spam posted to Usenet. But it's also the source of a lot of non-spam posted to Usenet.
For example, about 27% of the posts to the Big-8 come from Google Groups now. If less than 27% of the spam posted to the Big-8 comes from google, then it's doing a better job of controlling it's users than Usenet as a whole. (I don't know if this is the case or not. Posts are easy to count. Classifying them as spam or not is harder.)
Either way, Google Groups is such a big contributor of noise and spam to Usenet because it's such a big contributor of _posts_ to Usenet.
No argument about the interface, however. But the retention is nice!
Re:2 points (Score:3, Insightful)
Binaries aside, usenet suffers from a far too great spam problem to ever be reborn in something that resembles what it used to be. Spammers aside, many residents can still in a fit of rage (and you know it happens) flood an entire newsgroup to death with crap for weeks if not months without getting the middle finger from their provider.
Usenet has become the backalley of the Internet. We're all so goddamn nostalgic about what it was once, that we'll oppose to it being torn down.
Despite everything some people actually still use usenet as a means of communication, but it takes a lot of effort to keep the experience somewhat spam-free, and even then. I lost a lot of my slrn configuration a couple of years ago in a move of gigantic stupidity involving rm and a poorly written shell script. Let me reassure you that I wasn't exactly joyful that evening.
You'd just start yet another encoding format that eludes your proposed uuencode- and yenc-filters, and large binaries would just be splitted into parts over more messages. This would then further devolve into a cat and mouse game where usenet becomes even less usable so that the last few who haunt it for its original purpose leave.
I've been using usenet for far too long to deny that save for the nails in its coffin it is dead. I still use it at least once a week, but it has far outlived its original use. The fact that software/music/movie piracy is rampant in the a.b.* hierarchy doesn't really bother me, most ISPs in my country stopped carrying alt.binaries 5 years ago and referred their customers to commercial internet providers. This probably has more to do with the cost of storage/bandwidth or contracts than the actual legal issues.
As for the whole childporn issue, there are more ways than one to skin a cat (sadly enough for the cat). If these people aren't spreading their material over usenet I'm sure they'll find more than one way to spread it effectively. From what I gather things like Tor and Freenet are suited for material of that nature as well. Before someone mentions the whole "but we need anonymous networks" thing, the point if we need it or not is moot. If tor or freenet weren't used, I'm sure something else would be used with badly secured proxies or hacked servers.
With the massive alt.* drops I'm hearing about, I'm pretty sure that the next target for the RIAA and MPAA will be the commercial usenet providers (some of them were even dumb enough to advertise with "Download full length movies" as a feature, and I hope for them they have a good lawyer). Instead of suing someone who provides access to a medium every ISP provides, it would be like suing a few large companies that are promoting unauthorized distribution of copyrighted works.
The commercial usenet providers are todays backbone of usenet, Kill them off and you'll have effectively killed off usenet. I'll start crying that usenet is truly dead when those companies start closing shop.
Apparently decent reporting is DEAD at PcMag.... (Score:4, Insightful)
What a horrible article with a sensationalistic title. The only good thing I can say about that article is that at least the writer understands the technical aspects of usenet, unlike some of the articles I have seen lately. Claming "Usetnet is dead" is what makes him an idiot. I hope usenet is dead..FOR HIM.
I love the newsgroups and have used all aspects of them daily since the mid 90s. When I discovered binaries in 1998 I couldn't believe how ingenious it was. I have had a premium news service for the past 5 years and it's the one bill I pay every month with joy...Usenet is not dead - it's only gotten better. But they WANT to kill it.
If the ISP want to discontinue them they're stupid. It only bothers me in so much as I feel that is the first step in a campaign to ruin them, but due to the way usenet works, it would be a difficult task and would basically require removing all freedom on the internet (which is something these groups want, that is their goal - make no mistake about it - the corporate/governmental groups that are pushing this sort of thing want to turn the net into some bastardized bowlderized version of a three-way cross between early AOL, the home shopping network and MSNBC. Fuck that.
Re:Web 2.0 ftw (Score:4, Insightful)
Ease of use is very debatable. Adding a new Usenet group is far easier for me than finding a new forum, registering, learning it's interface and quirks, etc.
As for accessibility, OK, at least until your favorite forum's server loses power. Or forgets to pay it's registrar bill. Or the admin decides to shut it down. Or decides he doesn't like you and blocks you.
Re:Hmm...Giganews and other services are still the (Score:5, Insightful)
For some reason my Xnews, open right now, seems to not have noticed.
But have you checked the date? It's finally October 1st!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eternal_September
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Google Groups (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Apparently decent reporting is DEAD at PcMag... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Web 2.0 ftw (Score:3, Insightful)
And for me the most important ones:
1: Retaining the posts indefinitely.
Blog fora favours quickness of response, and older posts scroll off the page and disappear. Often, you can't even search for old posts. With usenet, you can continue an old discussion where the last post was made five years ago, and people will still see your new post. In a blog forum (including this one), no one will notice.
2: No individual censorship.
No-one owns the forum. The owner can't delete posts they disagree with, nor boot off a user. On a web forum, sucking up to the blog owner is so important that it's done automatically, without thought. On Usenet, people can ignore you until you go away, but they can't censor you.
Re:Apparently decent reporting is DEAD at PcMag... (Score:3, Insightful)
I see your point, and you are correct about my missing your meaning in that respect, so I apologize for calling you an idiot on tha basis.
You have to unserstand that I love usenet (for the same reasons as you likely) and have seen several articles lately characterizing it as some "child porn haven darknet" and describing it in a way which clearly showed the writer had no concept of usenet, it's history, or how binaries work. I read your article and appreciated much of it, but I am just pissed off about the whole thing.
I don't just "download binaries and use usenet as a big firehose" i use all aspects of usenet. I post and read text based threads, I download a lot of stuff - most of it non-copyrighted (but not all)....The point I was trying to make is that it is too soon to declare it dead.
If some ISPs stop carrying it, that won't stop everything, but you are right - the more nodes (or however you want to characterize it) it loses, the weaker it becomes in it's decentralization.
Hopefully many ISPs will not stop carrying it. People who want to download bins usually aren't doing so thru an ISP account - What about Europe and Asia?
Re:Netcraft is wrong; we need hard data (Score:5, Insightful)
It probably went down, because there's a whole generation that thinks PHP forums and Google will help you find *all* the answers when, in fact, early internet engineers were pretty smart guys and designed something in which you would go to one place to concentrate your searches. Furhtermore, the posting would be replicate to all servers.
Personally, I think googling for a technical answer in particular regarding programming languages is a PITA. Too many forums to search for. Usenet makes it much simpler, but witness the moronity level when Ubuntu and Apple don't propagate their mailing list to Usenet (which just about every other self-repecting OS crowd does - Debian, FreeBSD, etc.)
Re:It deserved to die (Score:2, Insightful)
Hey bro - the mere fact that I'm posting here at /. rather than over at your PC mag blog points out one of the problems with the current discussion systems. I had no desire to create yet another account merely for a one-shot discussion. And you can pretty much bet that I would have used yet another name, which makes it difficult to have any thread of continuity regarding posting histories and social interaction. It doesn't appear that OpenID is getting much traction in the population at large. And creating a new USENET ID is a lot easier than creating a new blogosphere ID. With the added bonus that I don't have to give a whole bunch of info to USENET like I do to websites for the "privilege" of adding content value to their site. Although in my case I suppose the value of the content may be dubious at best.
The only reason I was even going to post at PC mag was because of the abundesen post wherein he first steps on his own dick because he didn't bother to read your article, and then spends time spinning ever more fanciful polemics to try to retrieve his dick from under his foot.
On a USENET group thread he most likely would have gotten called on that crap by a bunch of people (and might have actually learned a little netiquette and apologized before trying a different approach). You still would have gotten flamed to an extent like you are here, and the discussions in support of your position would have been there also (same as here). However, I would have had an opportunity to killfile him if he stubbornly persisted (well, I could have done it on a whim too), and the thread wouldn't necessarily die after a day or two (sometimes hours) like they do on slashdot and blogs in general. USENET threads can be actively revived after lying dormant (particularly with ISPs tending to keep longer USENET posting histories than they once did) - something that doesn't happen here, and rarely happens elsewhere.
It seems to me that if the /. admins were as into freedom of information as they are so often assumed to be, they'd offer free xml feeds of their comments sections. It wouldn't be terribly difficult to fix some of the deficiencies in their system. Unfortunately, they have a near monopoly on the tech discussions taking place in geekdom because they won't open source their comments, which is where the real value is. It's certainly not in their software. Frankly, if they offered a decentralized store for their feeds and offered the ability to do user authentication, it would be fun to offer them some competition. But I suspect that when it comes to truly open competition, people are a lot more proprietary, capitalistic, and protective than they think
Maybe I'll have a moment of net silence in remembrance of PLONK.
Re:Google Groups (Score:4, Insightful)
Google is doing all of great service in having bought the early Usenet archives. This is a human knowledge base.
Re:Hmm...Giganews and other services are still the (Score:3, Insightful)
hey, people learn from mass media...
Dark Usenet? (Score:4, Insightful)
When I started on Usenet, right after the flood waters receded, you had to know someone to get a feed from them. I used to get my daily usenet fix over a 2400 bps modem to an amiga 500 running dnews 1.13, I think. I was a collaborative effort.
Maybe in the future usenet can be reborn but with in a closed system again. You have to know someone to get a feed from.
Re:this was never about porn (Score:4, Insightful)
Just yesterday, Cuomo was out posturing and making sure he was strengthening his political future [democratandchronicle.com].
Explain to me how the hell this is "voluntary". This is the same things as the "mandatory volunteer work" that many high schools are requiring now. It's not voluntary if you'll be punished for not doing it!
Then let's start holding all those ISPs responsible for copyright infringement RIGHT NOW because they're still making it possible to do it. Or will he wait until it's feasible to put the brakes on the most public, most easily-blocked methods and THEN make it a mandatory voluntary program?
Re:Web 2.0 ftw (Score:3, Insightful)
If you wanted an answer to a complicated technical question, it was the best place to go. If you wanted to discuss obscure music theory, it was the place to go.
Still is. For instance, a few months ago I worried that a spreadsheet program gave funny answers. Lo and behold, the developer of the thing was reading the newsgroup and I got a pretty reasonable explanation.
For programming languages and OS, nothing beats Usenet. Can you live without comp.lang.* ? Only if you're an amateur. All the experts are on Usenet. This also goes for some members of the scientific community, in particular the math dudes.
Re:Hmm...Giganews and other services are still the (Score:5, Insightful)
Wait... So they're preventing AOL'ers and their big ISP ilk from accessing USENET? Is this a return to the golden age?
This is awesome for usenet.
Re:Usenet is dead... (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh please please please let the spammers realise that the informed aren't their target audience, and leave too.
Usenet's not dead but PC Magazine is (Score:3, Insightful)
Can't believe people take PC Magazine seriously any more. I mean really, when you have to resort to calling Usenet dead to sell papers...
This guy probably thinks usenet's dead because Google archiving of it has gone from bad to worse. Either that or it's dead because his ISP stopped maintaining a news server. But usenet is not dead, in fact it's working just fine as the tens of thousands of groups that just came up in tin from on my local ISP (via supernews) prove.
But then usenet never was about being popular, or archiving, or graphics, or forums, and it doesn't lend itself to making money.
The many follow-on attempts to replicate usenet fall short of what still works great and is still the easiest way to get _content_ without the fluff or marketing.
No, usenet is not dead, not by a long shot, though there will always be those who will say it is to make a buck. There will probably also continue to be those who want us to think usenet is dead in order to sell their own profitable version of usenet, but follow the money and you'll find only wanna-be television content, as in most profit driven media, and lots of ads. Bottom line: Usenet will not advertise in PC magazine, and usenet will not die.
Re:Hmm...Giganews and other services are still the (Score:2, Insightful)
That's because we don't like moderately phrased, reasoned opinions with facts, or predictions that come with caveats and margins for error. Blogs with that kind of boring realism are only read by accountants and statisticians – two groups that, ironically enough, don't make up a large proportion of news turnover.
Re:Hmm...Giganews and other services are still the (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure, but why? That would break 20--30 years' worth of high-quality Usenet software for (AFAICS) no good reason.
What obviously needs work is the message format itself; character sets and so on. A new RFC has been in the works at USEFOR for years ... dunno if it's done yet, or if anyone will care.