Difference between revisions of "Zdoom (IRC channel)"

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On June 25 2003, Kesler got tired of the channel and dropped its ChanServ registration. [[Stephen "SoM" McGranahan]] then re-registered the channel, removed the operators of their status, and dropped the registration again, leaving the channel without operators and nearly impossible to re-register. After several people complained to Freenode's IRC operators, Freenode network administrator dmwaters took responsibility for the channel. She stated that in order for the off-topic channel to remain on the network, it would have to follow Freenode's [http://freenode.net/channel_guidelines.shtml channel guidelines], remove auto-opped users, and tone down the language and sexual references.
 
On June 25 2003, Kesler got tired of the channel and dropped its ChanServ registration. [[Stephen "SoM" McGranahan]] then re-registered the channel, removed the operators of their status, and dropped the registration again, leaving the channel without operators and nearly impossible to re-register. After several people complained to Freenode's IRC operators, Freenode network administrator dmwaters took responsibility for the channel. She stated that in order for the off-topic channel to remain on the network, it would have to follow Freenode's [http://freenode.net/channel_guidelines.shtml channel guidelines], remove auto-opped users, and tone down the language and sexual references.
  
Exactly one month later, dmwaters closed the channel, stating that several people requested that she do so. Other mitigating factors were a lack of respect for Freenode's channel guidelines, particular users driving away her channel staff, and that the channel was making her, as the founder, "misserable" (sic).
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Exactly one month later, dmwaters closed the channel, stating that several people requested that she do so. Other mitigating factors were a lack of respect for Freenode's channel guidelines, particular users driving away her channel staff, and that the channel was making her, as the founder, "misserable" [sic].
  
 
[[Bill "Bloodshedder" Koch]] had registered the channel #zdoom on the [[Wikipedia:OFTC|OFTC]] IRC network in April of 2003, but an early campaign to migrate users to that network was unsuccessful. After the channel on Freenode was closed, nearly all of its former regulars eventually relocated to OFTC.
 
[[Bill "Bloodshedder" Koch]] had registered the channel #zdoom on the [[Wikipedia:OFTC|OFTC]] IRC network in April of 2003, but an early campaign to migrate users to that network was unsuccessful. After the channel on Freenode was closed, nearly all of its former regulars eventually relocated to OFTC.

Revision as of 04:55, 5 February 2007

The title given to this article is incorrect due to technical limitations. The correct title is #zdoom.

#zdoom is a Doom community general discussion channel, not officially related to any project, nor specifically related to ZDoom. It is likely the most populated Doom-related IRC channel, averaging approximately 50 users at any given time.

Origins

#zdoom was originally created on the Freenode network by Kurt Kesler as a private editing-related channel. Tensions in the #doom channel involving James "Quasar" Haley and the other channel operators caused him and many other regulars to question the way the channel was run. #zdoom was advertised as an alternative to #doom, and gained much of the latter channel's regular members. The #doom operators involved in the disagreement soon moved to their own private network.

Freenode controversy

During the channel's existence on the Freenode network, Kesler was sometimes unable to gracefully handle the channel's more rambunctious members. His frustration resulted in ownership of the channel being passed between him and Quasar a number of times. Throughout 2002 and the first half of 2003, some users were complaining that channel operators were abusing their privileges.

On June 25 2003, Kesler got tired of the channel and dropped its ChanServ registration. Stephen "SoM" McGranahan then re-registered the channel, removed the operators of their status, and dropped the registration again, leaving the channel without operators and nearly impossible to re-register. After several people complained to Freenode's IRC operators, Freenode network administrator dmwaters took responsibility for the channel. She stated that in order for the off-topic channel to remain on the network, it would have to follow Freenode's channel guidelines, remove auto-opped users, and tone down the language and sexual references.

Exactly one month later, dmwaters closed the channel, stating that several people requested that she do so. Other mitigating factors were a lack of respect for Freenode's channel guidelines, particular users driving away her channel staff, and that the channel was making her, as the founder, "misserable" [sic].

Bill "Bloodshedder" Koch had registered the channel #zdoom on the OFTC IRC network in April of 2003, but an early campaign to migrate users to that network was unsuccessful. After the channel on Freenode was closed, nearly all of its former regulars eventually relocated to OFTC.

Current status

Today, #zdoom remains a lively discussion center where community members can freely chat about almost any sort of topics they please. Like #legacy, discussion rarely centers around Doom or ZDoom. Common topics are too numerous to list, and the current focus of the channel can change quite rapidly.

Although many channel regulars are also members of the Doomworld forums, the two entities have no official connection.

External link