5:57 PM
@IMSoP I definitely agree with the "that's likely personal preference" part. My primary mailing list experience comes from the HAProxy list, where many participants also participate on the Linux kernel list. For the latter the “courtesy copy” effectively is a must, due to the sheer volume, so that likely translates into expectations on the HAProxy list. Personally I try to adapt to “whatever the others are doing”, so I don't strongly care either way, but have a preference for “courtesy copy”.
Regarding the “high volume” part, that's also something that is mentioned in Danack's docs. However I don't follow that argument: I'd rather read 4 emails with 50 words each, than one email with 200 words. The total "volume" of words is identical, but the former allows me to independently mark 3 of the 4 emails as read when they are entirely clear and I don't have anything further to add. In other words, it allows me to digest the parts piecemeal.
@IMSoP So it's probably not so much "specific recipient", but "specific narrow topic" and that also circles back to the "different sub-threads". For an RFC discussion, I might point out that an example is unclear in one subthread and of course I'm interested in the clarification (thus courtesy copy). Others might be busy discussing some oversight in a different subthread and thus might want to focus their attention on that aspect for now (e.g. due to time constraints) …
… and thus don't currently care about the example that I found unclear.
Neither is off-topic within an RFC discussion, it's different aspects that are of interest to different participants at a given time, but each "group" might read the other subthreads later on a rainy sunday afternoon or so.