Saturday, December 8, 2012

What Is A Crossposting?


Crossposting will get you in hot water with most forum and newsgroup moderators. It's an act of redundancy, which is something that really irritates a lot of people on newsgroups and the Internet!

When you crosspost something, you post the same information to different newsgroups or Internet forums. This is sometimes done by people who are very new to Internet forums or newsgroups. The reason is usually that they have a question that they want answered and they're not sure of the best place to ask. To increase their odds of getting their question answered, they simply post the question to a number of different newsgroups of forums. Unfortunately, moderators hate this.

The Consequences

Crossposting carries with it an inherent risk. There are only so many groups that will actually be relevant to any given question. When an individual posts the same question to a number of different groups, there's a good chance that the question won't have anything to do with the topic of some of those groups. This is a huge breach of etiquette among newsgroup and Internet forum users.

Users can crosspost messages in the USENET system by specifying two or more different newsgroups in the "Newsgroups:" line of the header. In some cases, this is actually desirable. For example, if you are posting a question about antibiotics that would be of interest to members of the biology forum and of the medical forum, you could simply specify both newsgroups. If you did, members of those newsgroups could converse with one another across the two different newsgroups without any confusion whatsoever. What moderators are worried about are spam posts. Crossposting is, unfortunately, also a very handy tool for spam and moderators will sometimes take actions to get rid of people whom crosspost habitually.

If you crosspost to different forms or newsgroups and you aren't keeping the subjects relevant to the groups to which you post, you may find yourself banned. This is simply the easiest way for moderators deal with the problem. They ban your account and they never have to hear from you again. Sometimes, the moderators may actually ban you for life, so be sure you ask before you crosspost anything. If you do crosspost, it's considered polite etiquette to specify that the message has been crossposted to other forums and which forms it has been crossposted to. This at least lets the moderators know that you're not trying to conceal what you're doing and that what you're doing was probably done for a good reason.

Using it intelligently

USENET the moderators are engaged in a constant war against spam. If you want to help them out, you can use tools such as crossposting intelligently and in a way that improves the quality of the forms for everybody participating in them.

Crossposting intelligently really just requires using common sense. If you have something to ask a newsgroup and it's obvious that it would be on topic for another newsgroup, you can actually save space on the servers by crossposting it. Just be sure that you indicate that you did so in the message itself.

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