RealAlHazred
Frumious Flumph (Your Grace/Your Eminence)
Speaking seriously for a change, I have seen people who misunderstand copyright, who nuke their own post histories because, say, they posted some worldbuilding they were doing and wanted to maintain copyright in case they published. Which I understand, even if I think it's unfair -- you're basically posting on a private forum for people to comment; presumably, even if you don't use the ideas people reply with, they are at least informing your decisions. It seems grossly unfair to use that mental labor and then wipe it out so that they can't go back and refer to the original.I am always extremely disappointed in people who decide that they need to go through and nuke their entire posting history when they decide to leave ENWorld. It strikes me as very childish; making sure they destroy any conversation they were a part of because they don't want to play anymore. Luckily, it's only happened a handful of times over the years.
On the orther hand, your ideas are the only things you actually truly own, in the sense that people can't take them from you -- except in the sense of taking ideas you post, in a private forum or elsewhere. So, in that sense it makes total sense to burn your bridges when you leave.
On the other other hand, the whole, "the Internet never forgets" thing is complete BS. While it is a cultural monolith that has been created by the labor of millions of people and is therefore a thing to marvel at, it is also being chipped away by these sorts of actions -- cease-and-desist letters, nuking posts in forums, bankruptcies of websites, etc. The loss to RPGs when Yahoo! Groups and Google Plus went away is huge.







