Google Flips Back to Groups Beta (Again) 363
afabbro writes "Google backed off its beta of Google Groups within 24 hours of making it mandatory for all users. You may recall that its lack of features (date searches), unwanted features (e-mail masking), and clunky user interface met with a very chilly reception here. Unfortunately, as of December 5th, Google Groups Beta is back and you can't get to the original (wonderful) Google Groups anymore. Be sure to share your opinion with Google."
Email masking... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Email masking... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Email masking... (Score:5, Informative)
On occasion, it can be very useful to try and contact somebody that had a similar problem, but a while ago. (ie, the thread is long since inactive)
And I doubt that hiding those emails will have much practical impact on getting less spam. (people often use NOSPAM type emails anyway)
Re:Email masking... (Score:5, Informative)
You can see the email address in Google Groups if you click on the 'Reply to Author' link.
Re:Your email address is part of your USENET ident (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Email masking... (Score:5, Insightful)
Every so often I need info a thread that has gone dormant. Since a reply to the thread won't get a response, it sometimes makes sense to e-mail the author(s) directly. I have done this a few times, and even though sometimes the thread is almost 2 years old, I still get useful replies.
I agree that public listings of e-mail addresses is a good way to get spam, but it is useful enough that I hate to see it completely removed.
Re:Email masking... (Score:5, Interesting)
However, I have contacted google and told them they have violated the DMCA by engaging in unauthorized modifications to my copyrighted usenet postings. At no time did I give any right to google, or anyone else, to modify my postings of the past 14 years in any way. It is my right, not googles, to include my email address in my postings.
To those who say 'but it will stop spam'. If you don't want to risk spam from usenet postings, use a fake or otherwise hidden email address.
I would further add that acceptance of this sets a horrible precedent. What will be next? Filterning of certain news groups that might be deemed 'inappropriate' by some political groups? Editing or exclusion of posts based on keywords?
Its a slippery slope and while this change might seem minor it goes completely against what usenet is about.
Re:Email masking... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Email masking... (Score:5, Insightful)
There is also no purpose to it. Every single post ever made to usenet has already been harvested by spammers, so what's the issue with making them public?
Re:Email masking... (Score:3, Insightful)
New posts in their new proprietary Google Groups will also get harvested.
Re:Email masking... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Email masking... (Score:5, Funny)
But surely you and the other guy using Objective-C know each other and your email addresses by now?!
Re:Email masking... (Score:5, Insightful)
I've received mail before from people who have found a post of mine on Google groups and wanted to ask me a quick question and I've always been happy to respond.... Why should google stop those people from mailing me in the future?
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Email masking... (Score:2, Interesting)
However, I should still be able to search for them. Very often I want to search for a post written by someone with a very common name, and do so because his/her email address is unique and not even near being common.
They should allow us to search for the email address and return the all the results, even if not displaying the actual addresses.
Modifying articles is a copyright violation (Score:5, Insightful)
I recently retrieved all articles in Google Groups posted using either of the four e-mail addresses I remember having used for Usenet (there were 429 such articles, posted between 1985 and 1997). I never mangled my e-mail address on purpose, but I had mostly stopped posting to Usenet when spamming took off in the mid 90's. Those four addresses have since all been disabled, although I tried to keep them alive as long as possible, as a matter of principle (I preferred using blacklists to silence annoying senders rather than give up my freedom to express myself in public for the convenience of spammers).
Google not only masks the address of each poster, but also anything in the article itself that merely looks like an e-mail address, including Message IDs. When I quote somebody else, referring to the author of that quote by name and e-mail address, Google sees fit to remove that identifying information. I did not approve of them mangling my articles in this way; that was not part of the understanding of how my postings were to be processed when I made them.
Since I retain the copyright to my articles, I have the right to control in what way they may be disseminated by others. I'm perfectly happy with Google or anyone else archiving my articles for future readers, as long as they don't modify what I have written. If someone wants to quote a significant portion of an article rather than all of it, that's fine too, as long as they attribute it to the original author, but that's not an archive, and that's not what Google is doing. Instead, Google is systematically erasing information detailing exactly who wrote what part of each article. What if an e-mail address is used as the sole identifier of the author in an explicit copyright notice, will Google destroy that information too?
As for Google allowing individual authors to opt out from having their articles archived at all, that's fine but it's no excuse for systematic copyright infringement, however small. To make a rough analogy, that's like Napster allowing copyright holders to request their own titles to be removed from Napster's database on an individual basis, while continuing to distribute anything the copyright holders haven't complained about (maybe because they haven't found out about it). For distribution to be legal, copyright requires authors to opt in to it, not fail to opt out. If authors want to opt out from enforcing their rights, they do so by neglecting to sue.
I want to tell Google: You can continue distributing my 429 articles if you like, as long as you distribute them verbatim, without any modifications of what I once wrote. Google however does not provide me with that option. Should I really have to send Google 429 removal requests, and then submit my articles to some other public archive, just to make that point? What a waste.
boo (Score:5, Funny)
signed... disgruntled freeloader.
Re:boo (Score:3, Informative)
Re:boo (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:boo (Score:3, Informative)
Re:boo (Score:2)
Cheers.
Re:boo (Score:4, Informative)
The fact that you couldn't imagine in 1987 that anyone running a new server would ever be able to afford enough storage to keep all of USENET available does not constitute an expectation that your articles would be available for a limited time.
Re:boo (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:boo (Score:5, Funny)
Re:boo (Score:2, Informative)
Re:boo (Score:5, Informative)
> No. It isn't. Nothing is public domain unless put there by its copyright holder,
> or by the expiry of its copyright.
While its true the posts are not public domain, and technically are copyrighted, the authors already granted permission for the usenet network to reproduce the messages and distribute them to usenet clients, simply by willingly posting them.
So google, acting as a usenet carrier/server, has the permission to do this.
Additionally, as long as the people using clients do not reproduce the works outside of usenet, they have the right to obtain and archive the messages as well already (copyright never prevented that)
So google could even charge for this service legally.
I'm glad they choose not to though.
Yeah - and use the free Google Desktop Search! (Score:2)
Then run Google search on your own data!
Re:boo (Score:2)
Re:boo (Score:3, Funny)
I know I got pretty bored before I managed to get my current job.
Someone please call the lawyers back! (Score:5, Informative)
OK, before anyone else posts ill-informed rubbish, please go back and read the previous thread, where this argument was done to death. For those who can't be bothered, here's the executive summary:
Re:Someone please call the lawyers back! (Score:3, Insightful)
OK, before anyone else posts ill-informed rubbish
You're going to beat us to it, just like in the previous thread. Some specific points are brought up below.
2. "The system" of usenet is a system where it is left undefined what the client is that is viewing the posts. When I posted some of my first usenet posts, Microsoft did not have a usenet reader yet. Now they do. Does that mean I can complain that users have no right to use Outlook's news reader to access posts I made back then? No, of course no
Re:boo (Score:2)
Re:boo (Score:2)
Please understand that it's been the technical user base that's supported your product from the start. We have told our friends and family to use google over yahoo or other popular search mediums because it was _spare_ and it did its job well.
Trying to pave a commercialized highway through usenet postings is a fantastic way to alienate your 'grass roots' fanbase. There are _many_ of us who are very displeased with the recent 'dumbing down' of google groups.
As soon as you let marketing
On the plus side (Score:5, Informative)
Re:On the plus side (Score:3, Interesting)
Things I see that are good:
1. More user-centric (highlighting names, etc.) rather than message centric.
2. The GMail style expando-headers makes for faster drilling down.
3. Much faster page loading (might just be new hardware).
The down-sides:
1. I think the tree mode is the more usable, and yet you have to click to get to i
Re:On the plus side (Score:3, Informative)
I understand that.
Sorry, I thought I was being clear. I was agreeing with you, and further clarifying WHY I think people are responding the way they did (despite your well observed points).
HOWEVER, since my post, I've realized that it's not all good. Some of the tricks they're playing with JavaScript really suck for posting. For example, if you type up a huge post (I
It Seems To Me... (Score:4, Interesting)
Sucky. (Score:5, Interesting)
Failing that, is there another way to look search/view the old Usenet archive?
Re:Sucky. (Score:5, Informative)
Click on a group, then at the top of the messages, click on 'Viewing titles only'. This removes all the text and gives you just a listing of all message titles.
Now insides of a message goto the top, and just above first message you will see a link of 'view as tree'. It still is missing the previous,next links at the bottom. Also it does not have that bar along the side of the tree showing you which messages are in the other frame.
Re:Sucky. (Score:3, Funny)
Not sure about the technical reasons, but t the very least, there's also the business reason - any code there is needs to be maintained. Which costs the company money. So any code the company doesn't need won't be maintained and thus will be retired.
This is just a WAG, there could be other reasons too (underlying data / APIs / etc..)
Not bad enough (Score:5, Funny)
I like it! (Score:5, Interesting)
I like the improved 'posting' speed; I love the 'starred topics' (Though I remain sceptical that the 'new posts' feature works properly - I keep thinking "new since when?"). I like the idea that a thread has become the notional unit searched in the new UI - Google Groups 2 far better suits my needs.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I like it! (Score:2)
No, they haven't [google.com] (to take a random example).
However, I admit that the single-posting link doesn't have an obvious way to get back to the thread. One way, of course, is to search for the text in the posting...
it needs work (Score:2)
it needs to be able to view the post back in context (ie thread view). other than that I don't see anything here that wasn't before. It's just different - not the same - but not really worse.
I think what folks are most threatened by is google appears to be going after a yahoo type look - ie to make it look more like a web forum and less like usenet.
Can't have all thos
Re:I like it! (Score:2)
Deep linking is back (Score:4, Informative)
However, the deep link you get now is a Google article number, similar to the DejaNews article numbers -- which no longer work of course. The old Google deep links encoded the MsgID directly in the URL, thus guarateeing their usefulness in the future.
Re:I like it! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I like it! (Score:2)
You're thinking of New Coke. Which you can actually still purchase in the mid-west. Right next to clear pepsi and Moxie.
Re:I like it! (Score:2)
Note, we (the Midwest) are not in the South and do not have New Coke.
Also, nearly all of our vehicles have hoods.
Re:I like it! (Score:2)
*raises hand*
Now, is it just me and Bruce Willis, or did you like Hudson Hawk too?
Re:I like it! (Score:2, Insightful)
Also: when viewing a group summary, clicking "view titles only"
Re:I like it! (Score:3, Informative)
Finally, the "old" interface is still very much available. It's at http://groups.google.com
Incorrect. Try to go anywhere from there and you just end up with the new interface anyway.
Re:I like it! (Score:4, Interesting)
1). The new format wastes screen real estate. The default forces you to view a summary of the posts, with a left sidebar of where you've been lately, and a right sidebar of other messages. I liked it better when I simply got a complete list.
2). Looking at titles only causes the subject text to overwrite the date field, in a jumble of characters. Now, this may be because I'm using Mozilla, on Linux -- Windows with IE may handle the fonts better.
3). The old format had a click on the username, to instantly link to a search for that username on Google groups. I'd never respond to a new usenet posting until it arrived on Google and I was able to do this -- it's crucial to determining who's a troll. Even if trolling is not a problem, the ability to check the quality of the information by what the person's said before is important. You can do it here on /., you know.
4). I liked browsing sci.chem.analytical [groupsrv.com], comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips [usenet4all.com], or even rec.crafts.brewing [google.ch] in a clean format. I don't need to join a Google groups clone of Yahoo groups and participate in the newbie love-fest. (If I've missed other sources of web-based Usenet archives, I'd like to hear about them)
Fine then, let me search on Thread Properties (Score:3, Interesting)
Eliminating threads that have 1 message/0 replies would make finding things MUCH faster. Right now I find tons of threads that are people asking the same question, and not very many where someone provided an answer.
Didn't some student not too long ago research what made a "good newsgroup"? They should put his research into the search parameters somewhow.
Huh? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
http://groups-beta.google.com/advanced_search
http://groups.google.com/advanced_group_search?
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Interesting)
In my experience, users with older (>24hr) cookies see these kind of changes, while the rest have to wait for their cookie to age a bit.
Maybe this will clear up the nonstop "I see it, I don't" posts about Google sites.
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
When I type groups.google.com into my address bar, I go to the new interface.
Even if I clear my gmail "remember me" cookie, I go to the new version.
The initial search interface is the same but he results are the new interface.
Mod parent down (Score:3, Informative)
It doesn't sound bad at all... (Score:4, Informative)
If you read it, it looks like they are really aiming it at the LCD, with key segments like:
Then again, most press releases are written with their intended audience being 6-year olds. "Ford Motor Company Inc. makes cars! Vroom vrooom! Beep beep! Ford cars!"
Re:It doesn't sound bad at all... (Score:2)
I know this is just an example illustrating the possibilities, but wouldn't it be wiser to consult a doctor instead of joining a Usenet discussion to explain your situation (using a keyboard), reply to questions (again using a keyboard), looking for other threads (keyboard)...
Isn't that a little odd?
Re:It doesn't sound bad at all... (Score:3, Funny)
Also, quite frankly, there are too many drug interactions for any doctor to keep track of. But, through useNET, I learned that chewing cinnabar kills off leeches! So I've switched to an alternative treatment for my social anxiety disorder - electric sho
original Google Groups (Score:5, Informative)
Re:original Google Groups (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure, but for how long? After they've settled down with the American version, they'll translate it and fuck up the others too.
And people keep saying "Click on options" to do this or that. IT DOESN'T WORK IN MY BROWSER.
Huh? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Google often releases a change to a subset of its servers, then backs it out later. I assume this is a "live beta" strategy.
Even when Google is implementing a change it can take several days for it to work through the entire server farm. You can refresh 2 or 3 times and get different screens each time.
So, at this point we know that there are 2 Groups interfaces out there, somewhat randomly distributed. We
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Some links still work.. (Score:2)
Great... (Score:4, Informative)
For example, the link http://groups.google.com/groups?oi=djq&ic=1&selm=
Re:Great... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Great... (Score:3, Informative)
The inventor of the WWW disagrees with you... (Score:2)
You wrote:
That's not google's fault, it's your responsibility to fix broken links.
It most certainly is Google's fault--they could have put in redirects to the new site if they chose to. (According to the OP, it sounds like they tried to, but screwed it up.)
As a website developer, I don't know all the sites that may link to me. Maybe if I know about some I might accomidate the links but most I don't even know about. And to be honest, I don't really care in most case.
In other news... (Score:2, Informative)
You may mod me offtopic now.
Re:In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
Only on google.com (Score:5, Informative)
Using it as a Mailing list (Score:3, Interesting)
However does the Moderation work yet?
I tried to setup an announcement list where the members can make announcements which would be moderated. I attempted to send message that required moderation and was able to moderate the message. No email no mention of the queued messages on the site. Nothing. As such we are still using yahoogroups for that list.
Re:Using it as a Mailing list (Score:2)
Apparently you don't.
The new Google Groups is Usenet groups + Google's answer to Yahoogroups, e.g. a web based mailing list interface.
Weird... (Score:2)
Couple of interesting new features (Score:4, Informative)
There's an Atom feed file for every group.
The about page for each group has group archives available by year and month.
I think once (if) I get used to the new interface this new Google Groups could be very nice indeed.
All of them haven't changed yet (Score:3, Informative)
I was wondering what the original post and this one was talking about until I realised that I am in canada and am automatically redirected to the google.ca page. groups.google.ca still has the old interface
Me too - same old link (Score:2)
So - as of Monday 06, 2004 you can still directly link to the old groups...
use the URL and not the link and you're fine... (Score:2, Informative)
I happen to have been doing some research all last week and this weekend on groups.google.com and have not noticed any strange changes at all. Sounds to me like they just changed a link on their front page to drive traffic to the beta, big deal?
Re:use the URL and not the link and you're fine... (Score:2)
Same here. Search has time etc. No feature missing (Score:2)
No change on my end. I still enter a time range on searches.
Posting times. (Score:2)
Thanks
Does anyone remember when Altavista dropped usenet (Score:3, Interesting)
I really wish they hadn't. It would be nice at least to have a second source. Of course they would have had to eventually limit searches on binary groups they offered, but it was a sad day when they dropped it altogether.
Altavista advanced search capabilities always seemed far more advanced than Google, even now. For example, how, again, in google can I search for an article where a specific word is near another specific word (within n words), to avoid all the false matches of composite content? Google seems to spend most of its efforts determining where 80% would like to go relative to a particular topic rather than any degree of accuracy.
Threaded view? (Score:4, Insightful)
"un-google" GUI (Score:2)
Search by Date seems to be there... (Score:3, Informative)
This goes against Google's corporate mantra (Score:2)
Well, they would become evil sooner or later (all big things do), so I guess this is the time.
Ugly fonts! (Score:5, Insightful)
Who was the nutcase at Google that thought Groups needed a facelift? It was FINE AS IT WAS. I don't know what they're smoking over there.
I'm going to use the Canadian Google Groups (google.ca) in defiance for now, but I bet it will go away soon as well.
Arrrgh. Companies can't just leave a good thing alone.
-Z
Is it just me? I like it! (Score:4, Interesting)
I used to go to a lot of trouble handling NNTP feeds; since Google Groups was released I don't bother.
A little bit OT: Is it just me, or are some things getting simpler? GMail and Google Groups cuts down my 'overhead time'. The switch from Linux (well, sometimes Windows 2000) to Mac OS X saves me a lot of admin hours each month. The quality and productivity of coding tools (e.g., IntelliJ and LispWorks) is going through the roof: everything seems to be getting easier
Wrapped links remind me of spam (Score:4, Interesting)
"http://sonyelectronics.sonystyle.com/m..."
and then notice that its really
"http://www.google.com/url?sa=D&q=http://sonyel
it makes you wonder what use they have planned for those click histories ( tied into those cookies ).
Google - Real Ultimate Power (Score:3, Funny)
More Important Than The Human Genome Project (Score:4, Insightful)
DejaNews is more important for our society than the Human Genome Project. Just because only Slashdot-types (mostly) understand that doesn't make it less factual. It's wrong to leave it in the hands of one company.
Re:i was able to get the old google groups... (Score:2)