Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 18, No. 224.
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/
www.princeton.edu/humanist/
Submit to: humanist_at_princeton.edu
[1] From: Vika Zafrin <amarena_at_gmail.com> (17)
Subject: Re: 18.219 effects of junk mail
[2] From: lachance_at_origin.chass.utoronto.ca (Francois (47)
Lachance)
Subject: Re: 18.219 effects of junk mail
--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 17 Sep 2004 07:44:27 +0100
From: Vika Zafrin <amarena_at_gmail.com>
Subject: Re: 18.219 effects of junk mail
Willard and Humanists--
This morning I came across Mark Hurst's article "Managing Incoming
Email: What Every User Needs to Know." It's a 35-page report
available here:
http://www.goodexperience.com/reports/e-mail/
Mostly it's pretty basic, but it does give some tips for dealing with
junk mail. Like many people here, Hurst departs from the premise that
spam will continue to flow in, and that users don't have a choice but
to learn to filter it out on many levels.
-Vika
-- Vika Zafrin Director, Virtual Humanities Lab http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Italian_Studies/vhl/ Brown University Box 1942 Providence, RI 02912 USA (401)863-3984 --[2]------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Fri, 17 Sep 2004 07:45:01 +0100 From: lachance_at_origin.chass.utoronto.ca (Francois Lachance) Subject: Re: 18.219 effects of junk mail Willard, There is a another filtering layer to describe besides those signalled Don Weinshank in a positing to Humanits on September 16, 2003 and it just might be a way of dealing in part with the false negative/positive factor. The human reader and the interface. Most people in their reading habits will use the information contained in the "from" and "subject" fields to guide their reading. Spam has tought some readers _curiousity control_. One question arises. Does the software interface allow users to mark for deletion or does the software immediately transfer the incoming message to a delete folder? Good old ELM keeps the message to be deleted in sight with a tag ("D" for delete). GUI-based interfaces tend to make the deleted and unread disappear from the current screen. I point this out because I suspect in most households one step in dealing with paper-based post involves sorting mail for the occupants, previous and present. That is, in the non email world addresses are not so intimately connected with the subjectivity of the addressee. Part of the irritation of spam is not merely technical (network performance and mailbox overflow). It is also social. Spam tends to undermine expectations of being hailed as a person rather than a consuming unit. And taps into the very tenacious internalization of the etiquette of the response. The very existence of the noise of spam will likely strengthen back channel social networks a la six degrees of separation. Am I more likely to respond to an inquiry if it comes from a third party via a regular correspondent? Note that such inquiries would usually take the form of an invitation to do something. Inquiries in search of knowledge or know-how tend to be addresses to the distributed intelligence of lists, news groups and lately, blogs. In other words, responsibility for getting a message through is partially the responsibility of the sender. In most offices, urgent matters requiring an immediate response go through a minimum of three communication channels (phone, email, yellow sticky on the computer screen, a call to an assistant to yank the addressee out of a meeting). In the rhetoric of business communication, it has become a common question to ask: how many iterations of the message, in what form and at what intervals? BTW, from the epidemological perspective, spam watchers might have notices an increase in amounts of spam that coincides with the North American beginning of term -- an interesting Humanitites Computing project, to plot spam occurence against time and place. Erasmus would no doubt have made reference to spam in the De Copia: "Your email, having survived the filters and the competing sollicitations for my attention, arrive and gave me much pleasure..." -- Francois Lachance, Scholar-at-large http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~lachance A calendar is like a map. And just as maps have insets, calendars in the 21st century might have 'moments' expressed in flat local time fanning out into "great circles" expressed in earth revolution time.Received on Fri Sep 17 2004 - 03:22:05 EDT
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : Fri Sep 17 2004 - 03:22:06 EDT