[BALUG-Talk] REMINDER: BALUG: meeting: TUESDAY 2020-02-18 Rich Morin...

Akkana Peck akkana@shallowsky.com
Mon Feb 17 17:06:04 UTC 2020


Rick Moen writes:
>     I called the store [ ... ]
>     "[ ... ]  Maybe you should consider fixing your 
>     goddamned Web site, unless you really prefer losing business.'
> 
>     The guy said 'Er, sorry about that, but we can't fix it.  
>     We hired a firm to create the site years ago, but don't 
>     have access to edit it.  I was stunned, 

That's sadly common. I saw it with my old Toastmasters club in Santa
Clara: some past member had set up a website, but had moved on
without sharing the passwords with anyone else, so the website was
full of incorrect information no one could fix and no one could
point the domain elsewhere. We ended up registering a new domain
(Rick's solution), though every now and then we had to explain
to guests why the website they had found for us was so wrong.

And the "HOA" where I'm living now had a website hosted on some
hosting service that apparently was defunct. There was a machine
that was up and running and serving a few pages, but when I tried to
contact them so I could update the website, nobody answered either
phone or email queries. (I gather they had been cashing the checks
the HOA sent them, though.) Again, registering a new domain (which
was Rick's suggestion too) was the easiest answer, though the HOA
has since dissolved (it wasn't a real HOA, just a group that
collected $25/year to fund an annual BBQ).

I've heard similar tales from local artists, who hire someone
thinking they need a website to advertise their work, then can't
update the website later because whoever built it has moved on.
Probably something similar happened with Henry's Hunan.

To avoid problems like that, when I set up a website for a club or
nonprofit (I seem to do a lot of that), I make a big deal of sharing
the passwords with the board or other leaders. "I know you think you
don't know what to do with this, but if I disappear, you'll need it,
and you'll find someone technical who can use it. Keep it in a
safe place." They never do. If I ask them a year later, they have no
memory of that conversation and no idea where they might have put
the passwords.

I don't know how you get people to save website access information
in a way that they'll find it when they need it. Websites are
magical things that appear if there's a technical person around,
and no nontechnical person can possibly have any responsibility
for it except for possibly signing a check. And organizations never
seem to have an "IMPORTANT DOCUMENTS, DON'T LOSE" folder, either
paper or electronic.

        ...Akkana



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