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Date

Re: IP Address

 

Rosalee,

In IO groups how can we see a members IP address ?
We can't. Mostly.

The most recent IP address used when accessing the group's web site is not recorded as part of a member's profile or subscription record. I think that is because IP addresses are a bit too slippery for use as an identifier.
/g/GroupManagersForum/message/16334

That information probably is in Groups.io's server logs, but those logs are not made available to group owners, and are probably not kept for very long.

If you are a moderator or owner of the group you can look at the "View Source" of a member's recent posting or pending message, and any member subscribed to individual messages who receives the member's post may examine the header of message, but the message header may or may not reveal the IP address used when the member sent the message. Some email services do, some don't, and some such as Gmail do if the member sends via an app (SMTP) but not if the member sends the message from their web interface.

Shal


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Re: Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle

Leeni
 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

I know that every member is important to some extent, but is this member worth that much to you your group to warrant this much attention given to him? If he doesn't want to move to Groups IO when you make the move, let him remove anything personal that he wants to remove and then let him remove himself.
?
Groups IO is a MUCH BETTER platform to use for groups then Yahoo ever was even in its good day.
?
Leeni
?
?
?
?

-------Original Message-------
?
Date: 05/19/19 12:50:47
Subject: Re: [GMF] Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle
?
Pra
?
Do you know his precise objection, content, whatever that is his io concern???His mind may never be changed but might be more cooperative if the powers emphasize with him.??Or maybe there¡¯s some very basic misunderstanding???If you can get on his side of the fence maybe he¡¯d be more cooperative in a partnership to do the transfer. ie, him deleting it before or after.??He¡¯s got some bug up his butt that needs scratching, maybe it¡¯s something that mark can address or maybe he¡¯s all wet.
Personally I¡¯m interested in what agenda ¡°mark has¡±.
?
Many times some hand holding will get where everyone wants to head rather than hand slapping. If it doesn¡¯t work then at least you have the documentation that you did your best to accommodate.??I doubt he has any legal standing to prevent the transfer, but....
?
All that communication back channel so it doesn¡¯t proliferate thru the group.
?
Does his content include anything that another member may have block quoted in a reply??????C¡¯mon, really.
?
?
?
?


IP Address

 

In IO groups how can we see a members IP address ?


Re: Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle

 

Pra

Do you know his precise objection, content, whatever that is his io concern? His mind may never be changed but might be more cooperative if the powers emphasize with him. Or maybe there¡¯s some very basic misunderstanding? If you can get on his side of the fence maybe he¡¯d be more cooperative in a partnership to do the transfer. ie, him deleting it before or after. He¡¯s got some bug up his butt that needs scratching, maybe it¡¯s something that mark can address or maybe he¡¯s all wet.
Personally I¡¯m interested in what agenda ¡°mark has¡±.

Many times some hand holding will get where everyone wants to head rather than hand slapping. If it doesn¡¯t work then at least you have the documentation that you did your best to accommodate. I doubt he has any legal standing to prevent the transfer, but....

All that communication back channel so it doesn¡¯t proliferate thru the group.

Does his content include anything that another member may have block quoted in a reply???? C¡¯mon, really.


Re: Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle

 

Absolutely - posting even to a private group essentially makes the post public to anyone in the group or who subsequently joins the group. Furthermore, unless his posts explicitly state that they are not to be shared further, then text can be assume to be posted for the benefit and fair use of all group members.

Tim.

On 19/05/2019 14:22, Ellen wrote:

Wouldn¡¯t anything he posted to the group be ¡°public¡± once it¡¯s posted? If his replies to members were public, then there isn¡¯t a problem.
Ellen
?
[excess quote trimmed by moderator]


Re: Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle

 

On Sun, May 19, 2019 at 08:26 AM, Milt Baker wrote:
I have seen no sign of a political agenda on the part of Groups.io in hosting groups
I believe the reference is to the box at the top of the Pricing page.

Duane
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Re: Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle

Ellen
 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Wouldn¡¯t anything he posted to the group be ¡°public¡± once it¡¯s posted? If his replies to members were public, then there isn¡¯t a problem.
Ellen
?

From: Prasad via Groups.Io
Sent: Sunday, May 19, 2019 7:48 AM
Subject: Re: [GMF] Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle
?
Yes, we have already created the new group here and we have a plan to crowd fund to raise the money. We like the "Premium" level group and our plan is to maintain it at Premium level even after the first year. That answers one part.

Now the second part which is tough. The particular member has now explained the reason for his objection. He says he is objecting because "owners/operators of groups.io had kept their political agenda out of their hosting business - I would have been fine with moving there...?They made their agenda public - and that's where _I_ have to draw a line....". He says "You DO NOT have my permission to transfer/move, or to cause to be moved/transferred, any of my my personal information: including, but not necessarily limited to: my email addresses, Yahoo user names, and/or Yahoo account info to groups.io -- or to any other venue."

OK, it is clear that he is not on board. So he has to go.? Before it can be done I have generally scanned the files and photos section and there are no files or photos posted by this member. But there are a huge number of? posts? that he started and also his replies to posts made by other members. Do we need to delete each and every such post that has any reference to him? That would be a herculean task and even if it is done, it would make us lose a big lot of useful archive data.

I am confused..


Re: Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle

 
Edited

From my perspective having moved several groups from Yahoo to Groups.io, your best bet is this: tell him that if he objects to having anything he has posted moved to your new group on Groups.io, he's free to go to the Yahoot group and delete it before the move.? Give him a drop-dead-deadline perhaps 30 days before you begin the move, and tell him that anything on the group after that date will be moved.? That puts the onus on him, not on you.

I have seen no sign of a political agenda on the part of Groups.io in hosting groups, but the question is not whether there is a political agenda but what he believes.? He seems convinced that there is such an agenda.? But he's out of step with the rest of your members, and he should be the one to remove any data he wishes not to have moved--doing that is not the responsibility of the owner or moderator of the group.

My groups were moved before premium service was required, and in our case nobody was automatically moved to a new group.? Instead, as a part of the Groups.io transfer process, each member was invited to join our new Groups.io group, giving those who objected for any reason the option of not becoming a member of the new group.? ?And, yes, we had a few who declined, mostly longtime inactive members.??

Bottom line:? make this his decision, not yours, by telling him to remove anything that he doesn't want moved.? That's more than fair IMHO.

Milt Baker


Re: Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle

 

If I remember correctly when groups.io was new, this question came up.
You don't have to remove quotes of his posts in other's posts.

You may be able to put the responsibility on him to delete his own
posts from the old or possibly the new group after the transfer.

I don't see an easy way to sort or search for one member's posts and
delete them.

If you don't need the old group's posts you could just start the new
group and close the old one to new posts, but I gather you have a
reason to move the old posts to the new group.

Donald



On Sun, 19 May 2019 04:48:39 -0700, "Prasad via Groups.Io"
<ad_prasad@...> wrote:

Do we need to delete each and every such post that has any reference to him? That would be a herculean task and even if it is done, it would make us lose a big lot of useful archive data.

----------------------------------------------------


Join the Icom group, a general Icom (amateur radio) discussion
group on Groups.io:
/g/ICOM (recently launched, growing slowly)
**also, a new self-help group dedicated to your cat's health:
/g/CatVet (just launched)


Re: Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle

 

I help moderate a group at Yahoo but our notice of intent to move had a very different tangent.

One of our users who posts several times a day suddenly noticed that their posts were sometimes not showing up for days. Also, when their posts finally became available in the timeline, not a single word could be found through "Search Conversations" whatsoever. Well, stand by, because you're probably not going to believe what I found.

After researching this extensively, I discovered that no post made after January 8th, 2019, has been indexed, meaning that no post since that date can be searched or will be included in any search results! And guess what? It's not just our group but every group that I could check! Check your own groups (if you're still on Yahoo) and see for yourself.

People who search for groups to join by way of "" or "Search Groups" will be presented with a list of groups and their "usage" statistics which is supposed to show the current number of members and the last activity. The problem is this is not being updated! No public group statistics for any group have been updated since January 12, 2019, but most show (as does our group) January 5, 2019! This means that groups may be getting bypassed because they appear dormant when they may actually be very active!

As there is absolutely zero support for Groups, I found that the only method of contacting anyone at Yahoo was by way of Yahoo Customer Care () on Twitter. However, all attempts to communicate this egregious dereliction of duty have only been met with, "Thank you for your patience while this is investigated." It is going on 2 months without any apparent change or remediation.

After researching further, I was incredulous to find that Yahoo management has been cut by almost two-thirds over the last 18 months. Then I found a? where Verizon CEO, Hans Vestberg, stated unequivocally that Yahoo will (now Oath) "need to survive on their merits." I think it is extremely interesting to note that the date of that article was January 8, 2019!

So, we told our users what we found and made what we feel is a very accurate prediction: "Groups maintenance is no longer being performed by Yahoo. It appears Yahoo Groups is severely underfunded and may not survive. As a result, we must move or one day the group could simply disappear without recourse. All of our data would simply be lost."

We have had zero complaints as a result. In fact, we received cheers for going the extra mile.

The only reason we haven't moved to Groups.IO already is because there is no current facility to move post attachments intact or at least referenced within the post. Extremely important, not just to us, but many groups, I would think. Mark Fletcher??!!

In the meantime, we are working to backup our data with , which will begin tomorrow for more than 91,000 posts, 300 MB of attachments and 30 MB of files. We think the total will be around 1.5 GB or so. We know that may not be a lot for some groups but we think it should still take about 15 days.


Re: exclude 2 members

dave w
 

On Sat, May 18, 2019 at 01:46 AM, Peter Cook wrote:
Isn't it the case that if you remove the message from the archives immediately then it will not make to anyone set to receive digests or summaries?
Eh???
All my Admin access uses is the Bars'More sub menu.
Regards
davew


Re: Problem Changing to Groups.IO

dave w
 

Oops I sent a PM with my phn to Doug before reading to the bottom of this thread! I'm in New Zealand too and been dealing with lost Y* access. Drat.
Anyway, he can reply to me off list.
regards
davew ++


Re: Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle

Prasad
 

Yes, we have already created the new group here and we have a plan to crowd fund to raise the money. We like the "Premium" level group and our plan is to maintain it at Premium level even after the first year. That answers one part.?

Now the second part which is tough. The particular member has now explained the reason for his objection. He says he is objecting because "owners/operators of groups.io had kept their political agenda out of their hosting business - I would have been fine with moving there...?They made their agenda public - and that's where _I_ have to draw a line....".?He says "You DO NOT have my permission to transfer/move, or to cause to be moved/transferred, any of my my personal information: including, but not necessarily limited to: my email addresses, Yahoo user names, and/or Yahoo account info to groups.io -- or to any other venue."

OK, it is clear that he is not on board. So he has to go. ?Before it can be done I have generally scanned the files and photos section and there are no files or photos posted by this member. But there are a huge number of ?posts ?that he started and also his replies to posts made by other members. Do we need to delete each and every such post that has any reference to him? That would be a herculean task and even if it is done, it would make us lose a big lot of useful archive data.?

I am confused..


Re: Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle

 

On Sun, May 19, 2019 at 02:31 AM, Prasad wrote:
Is there a solution here?
Not an easy one, I suspect.

I would suggest that the person concerned be put on moderation immediately if he isn't already; that will stop any troublesome posts from him getting through.

Have you asked him what his objection is to a migration to Groups.io? If not then I suggest that you do; it may be that he is objecting simply "because he can" and expects to manipulate the rest of the existing group to suit him; people like that do exist, unfortunately.

Have other (existing group) members expressed any views for or against a move?

What is the underlying "reason" for your group's existence; is it hobby - related or something of greater significance? Can the group manage without him?

It may be that deleting him from the existing group before migrating is the best answer, althouth it would leave his historical posts in place. Getting rid of them could be extremely time - consuming.

At bottom one thing that you cannot allow is for a single member to take the rest of a large group hostage.

Chris


Re: Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle

dave w
 

Hi Prasad,
Yes what a sad case.
Point out the merits and reasons for the move being required for the benefits of all members.
What jurisdiction/ location is he in?

Then, as above, before the transfer is due to be made- terminate his membership (like the moderated/ banned list first)- I'm unsure how? GIO deals with these on import (IIRC they do not pick up any 'bouncing email addresses').

You can then archive any material that is not email text belonging to that person. And delete originals before transfer. As stated above, delete all posts/ email/ replies he might have made form the new group. Too bad if that destroys integrity, but you could point that out (before terminating) if he was a serious 'contributor'.

Personally, I have no use for such people in shared-open-network voluntary access public arenas.
Regards
davew


Re: Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle

Leeni
 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Here is a solution.............
?
If you want to move your group to groups IO then I would delete him from the Yahoo group and write to him telling him why.?Tell him that when the IO group is set up you will send him an invite or he can join by himself if he still wants to be added to the group. OR since you are probably going to have Groups IO do the transfer you will have to pay for 1?year Premium Service so?you can tell him once the transfer is made, you can add him yourself to the group if he'd like.
?
Leeni
?
?
?
?
?

-------Original Message-------
?
From: Ellen
Date: 5/18/2019 9:25:54 PM
Subject: Re: [GMF] Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle
?
I have one ... leave him where he is ....... then delete the old group. You can¡¯t force anyone to move to another group.
Ellen
?
From: Prasad via Groups.Io
Sent: Saturday, May 18, 2019 9:12 PM
Subject: [GMF] Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle
?
I am working to move a Yahoo group with almost 9800 members and I have some members taking serious objections. One has posted that he "_do not_ authorize anyone to transfer any of my personal information, or any of my yahoo account related information, to groups.io. " His words in quote marks.

Is there a solution here?
?
?


Re: Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle

Ellen
 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

I have one ... leave him where he is ....... then delete the old group. You can¡¯t force anyone to move to another group.
Ellen
?

From: Prasad via Groups.Io
Sent: Saturday, May 18, 2019 9:12 PM
Subject: [GMF] Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle
?
I am working to move a Yahoo group with almost 9800 members and I have some members taking serious objections. One has posted that he "_do not_ authorize anyone to transfer any of my personal information, or any of my yahoo account related information, to groups.io. " His words in quote marks.

Is there a solution here?
?


Re: Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle

 

You could give him the option to delete his content before the move.

If he hasn't posted many messages you could delete them after the
move. The owner of groups.io might have a solution. Contact him
through the support link on the web site.

I gather you are going to pay for a premium group, at least for the
first year? The free transfer option was discontinued earlier this
year and is now only available for a premium group, and you have to
pay for a full year for the premium group first.

If you're not going to pay for the premium group, you won't need to
address this matter since you won't be moving the message archive to
the new group.

Donald


On Sat, 18 May 2019 18:12:59 -0700, "Prasad via Groups.Io"
<ad_prasad@...> wrote:

I am working to move a Yahoo group with almost 9800 members and I have some members taking serious objections. One has posted that he "_do not_ authorize anyone to transfer any of my personal information, or any of my yahoo account related information, to groups.io. " His words in quote marks.

Is there a solution here?

----------------------------------------------------


Join the Icom group, a general Icom (amateur radio) discussion
group on Groups.io:
/g/ICOM (recently launched, growing slowly)
**also, a new self-help group dedicated to your cat's health:
/g/CatVet (just launched)


Transfer from Yahoo, member has serious objections, how to handle

Prasad
 

I am working to move a Yahoo group with almost 9800 members and I have some members taking serious objections. One has posted that he "_do not_ authorize anyone to transfer any of my personal information, or any of my yahoo account related information, to groups.io.?"?His words in quote marks.

Is there a solution here?
?


Re: Problem Changing to Groups.IO

 

On 24/03/2019 15:30, Shal Farley wrote:
Doug,

> Yahoo would not accept my change of email, and blocked me from the
> group which I own!
I don't recognize you from Y!GMF, if you'd like some advice in trying to get your new address connected to your group contact us over there.


> There seems to be nothing I can do except pay them money (which I
> won't do) to talk to a real live person, and who may be unable to help
> anyway..
Be cautious with anyone asking for money. There are a lot of scam outfits out there pretending to be Yahoo Customer Care.
On the other hand there is a relatively new Yahoo! Account Pro service, which is paid, but given that your primary concern is a access to a Yahoo Group they probably won't know how to do that.

> Can you please advise if IO can move this yahoo group to Groups.IO
> using this blocked email address?
If you can still sign in to your Yahoo Account, the one that owns the Yahoo Group, then you can do what you need without email access. The key is being able to sign in using your original Yahoo account ID and password. Where the sign-in page says to enter your email address it means the yahoo.com address associated with your Yahoo account.

> My group has one co-moderator who could use his email address. Would
> this work?
As long as he can invite someone (the transfer address) to join the group, and then promote that new member to moderator status, then yes. He could do the Yahoo tasks for your group.
It is the privilege to promote a member to moderator that you might not have given him as a moderator. Many owners are hesitant to give out that privilege as it is effectively all-powerful, second only to being an owner.

> He could become a co-owner of the new group.
That would allow him to do the Groups.io side of the transfer, which is probably the simplest way to handle it.
If you're leery about promoting him to owner you could take the steps on the Groups.io side and he could (in coordination with you) take the required steps on the Yahoo side.
Shal
Hi Shal.

Just a quick update - I have managed to obtain access to this yahoo group which I have owned for 18 years again! I managed this by hitting a button that changed all my (4) group passwords to a common one. This worked, and was a real relief. I now have what looks like full access to that group.

Next week I'm going to be fitted for some hearing aids (I'm 80) and once I have settled in with those, I'll come back to you for assistance which you kindly offered for the group shift to io.

--
Cheers.
--------
Doug Harris
Cambridge, New Zealand

The question is: Are we going to be in time, and are we going to do enough?
And the answer to both of those is no.
David Attenborough.