The Net: User Guidelines and Netiquette - by Arlene Rinaldi
ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS
(Email, LISTSERV groups, Mailing lists, and Usenet)
- Never give your userID or password to another person. System administrators that need to
access your account for maintenance or to correct problems will have full priviledges to
your account.
- Never assume your email messages are private nor that they can be read by only yourself
or the recipient. Never send something that you would mind seeing on the evening news.
- Keep paragraphs and messages short and to the point.
- When quoting another person, edit out whatever isn't directly applicable to your reply.
Don't let your mailing or Usenet software automatically quote the entire body of messages
you are replying to when it's not necessary. Take the time to edit any quotations down to
the minimum necessary to provide context for your reply. Nobody likes reading a long
message in quotes for the third or fourth time, only to be followed by a one line
response: "Yeah, me too."
- Focus on one subject per message and always include a pertinent subject title for the
message, that way the user can locate the message quickly.
- Don't use the academic networks for commercial or proprietary work.
- Include your signature at the bottom of Email messages when communicating with people
who may not know you personally or broadcasting to a dynamic group of subscribers.
Your
signature footer should include your name, position, affiliation and Internet and/or
BITNET addresses and should not exceed more than 4 lines. Optional information could
include your address and phone number.
- Capitalize words only to highlight an important point or to distinguish a title or
heading. Capitalizing whole words that are not titles is generally termed as SHOUTING!
- *Asterisks* surrounding a word can be used to make a stronger point.
- Use the underscore symbol before and after the title of a book, i.e. _The Wizard of Oz_
- Limit line length to aproximately 65-70 characters and avoid control characters.
- Never send chain letters through the Internet. Sending them can cause the loss of your
Internet Access.
- Because of the International nature of the Internet and the fact that most of the world
uses the following format for listing dates, i.e. MM DD YY, please be considerate and
avoid misinterpretation of dates by listing dates including the spelled out month:
Example: 24 JUN 96 or JUN 24 96
- Follow chain of command procedures for corresponding with superiors. For example, don't
send a complaint via Email directly to the "top" just because you can.
- Be professional and careful what you say about others. Email is easily forwarded.
- Cite all quotes, references and sources and respect copyright and license agreements.
- It is considered extremely rude to forward personal email to mailing lists or Usenet
without the original author's permission.
- Attaching return receipts to a message may be considered an invasion of privacy.
- Be careful when using sarcasm and humor. Without face to face communications your joke
may be viewed as criticism. When being humorous, use emoticons to
express humor. (tilt your head to the left to see the emoticon smile)
:-) = happy face for humor
- Acronyms can be used to abbreviate when possible, however
messages that are filled with acronyms can be confusing and annoying to the reader.
Examples: IMHO= in my humble/honest opinion
FYI = for your information
BTW = by the way
Flame = antagonistic criticism
Permission to duplicate or distribute this document is granted with the provision that
the document remains intact or if used in sections, that the original document source be
referenced.
Last updated: 03 OCT 96 - URL = http://www.fau.edu/rinaldi/net/elec.html