Originally posted by Mary Chambers
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"Notification of BBC H2G2 move" email - any clue, anyone?
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It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostWell, I don't know whether it's connected, but I had to sign in this morning, and I haven't had to do that for ages. I kept getting the password wrong - right on the fifth attempt, luckily.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostThis site! And almost every other site I visit regularly. Youtube was very temperamental about it, but I think I've sorted things out now.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostWell, there's no connection between this site and your h2h2 membership. Did you purge your cookies? I realise now that's what I did, and that's why I had to sign it to the blog.
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JUst back from a week away & I too have had the email, & have no idea what H2D2 is or was. It says "Our analysis tells us that less than ten percent of those contacted have so far opened the email, perhaps because they do not trust that it came from the BBC. " I wonder why? & this - "This suggests that many of our users will not be able to make an informed decision and we have therefore decided to modify our approach. Where a user tells us not to, their details will not be passed on. " - makes no sense at all. If people haven't ben opening emails, how can they tell "them" not to pass details on?
I do wish people would actually read their emails befoire they send them, or better still, get a non-techy to read it to make sure it's understandable.
(all praise to the forum - when I read the email I thought that someone was bound to have started a thread about it, either clarifying it or reassuring me that I'm not alkone in not undestanding it! - or, preferably, both)
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Pastey
It was legitimate
Hi All,
I'm sorry this took so long for me to post here, but we've been going around the Internet trying to find all the places where people were discussing that email, usually with the phrases "Is this for real" and "What's h2g2"
The email was legitimate. The BBC sold h2g2 to a company formed with a previous owner, a nice company offering hosting, and a collection of people from the community itself. And now we're free from all the restrictions that the BBC put on the site.
h2g2, short for the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, from those times when acronyms were considered cool, if ever a time existed, was originally to be a Earth based version of the Guide from the books. An on-line reference site, and this was 2 years before Wikipedia started.
When the dot com bubble burst, the company that owned it originally had to sell it, and the BBC bought it. I believe that they were mostly interested in the community aspect of it. The underlying code, and the staff that came with it, was exactly what they were looking for to power the new BBC message boards they were trying to bring in. The code was then re-written to power all the BBC message boards, and it still does.
During the recent round of cuts though, the BBC finally decided that h2g2 didn't fit into its brand image and decided to sell.
What they sold was the content of the database within h2g2 itself, and the software to power it. It did not sell any user details whatsoever. However, because we were creating a new user account/login system, we needed some way of tying together all the old accounts with the users who wanted to transfer and continue using h2g2. What we got were encrypted email addresses associated with the user accounts. Unless you come over to h2g2 and go through the transfer process, these email addresses will not be able to be unencrypted and therefore are safe.
Because the site had been moved onto the BBC single sign on, and then the BBCiD it meant that it shared the user accounts with other message boards. When h2g2 was split off, a check was done against the main site for all users who had visited h2g2 at any point. Even through clicking a link to an article while logged in. This did mean that we've had a lot of people asking "What on earth is h2g2?"
I hope that (rather belatedly) answers your questions, and yes, the emails weren't great were they.
Steve Dunkley
Digital Lead - h2g2
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Thanks for the explanation, Steve, except the bit: "The code was then re-written to power all the BBC message boards, and it still does." Or doesn't in the case of all the Radio 3 messageboards which the BBC axed a year ago . (hence dna, of course - Douglas Noel Adams).It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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