Hello members of Apolyton,
Ever since Apolyton got hacked in many ways, a couple of weeks ago, I have been thinking about the future of Apolyton, and if it has or should have any.
For the uninformed, our site and forums were hacked and many backdoors were installed. Only because of Solver's assistance we could repair most things. But up till this day we are still having a disfunctioning homepage. Unfortunately the communications between Martin Gühmann haven't been the best last couple of months either.
Then there is more, Civilization V has not brought to Apolyton what we had hoped and expected.
Most polytubes weren't very happy with the way Civ5 turned out and continued to play civ4, civ2 or just retreated back into the off topic forums. Truth has to be told, neither did Civ5 have much impact on me, which obviously has been reflected by a lack of enthusiasm in keeping up a lively civ5 environment at Apolyton. Unfortunately, because back at the launch of Civ5 we were very enthusiastic and were able to even release some unique interviews with Firaxians and discover some scopes about the game.
So now what about the future of Apolyton?
I'll be open and plain with all of you.
I am not interested in running Apolyton all by myself, neither do I have the technical skills to maintain the servers and the site. I have always been the non-technical guy on board.
There are some options I'd like to get some feedback on:
1. Would there be anybody on Apolyton who has the technical skills to maintain the server and the software, and is fully reliable? I know people who have the skills and I know people who are reliable. Keep in mind that this reliability is very important to me.
2. What is the general opinion about asking Solver, who helped us so good during the hack, to jump on this ship? He's got the skills and he is one of the most reliable guys in the Civ-universe. Yet he's also the co-owner and admin of weplayciv.
3. What would be a good procedure to close down Apolyton. It's clear that this is not something we can from one day to another. Some of Apolyton's content has value to the Civ-community in general. Some sites may want to take it over from us. Yet as well our forums host some activities that is valuable to some, just because it covers their day to day life. Perhaps Apolyton can move into an online archive in a couple of months, just to stay that way for another couple of months, followed by deletion. What are your ideas?
A 4th option could be to transfer the ownership of Apolyton to someone completely new.
I put it down here though I must admit that I'm not a big fan of that option. Apolyton contains a lot of very sensitive private data that I do not trust into the hands of someone I hardly know. This contains both my private data, including banking accounts, etc. and of course all those 100,000+ user profiles stored in our databases.
Fortunately this is not a matter of financial issues. Apolyton is not making any profits but neither is it costing us too much money, if it is losing money at all.
Apolyton is currently owned by Robert Plomp and Martin Gühmann, both own 50%.
I reach out to our community because communications between the both of us have been lacking and decisions need to be made.
Robert
Ever since Apolyton got hacked in many ways, a couple of weeks ago, I have been thinking about the future of Apolyton, and if it has or should have any.
For the uninformed, our site and forums were hacked and many backdoors were installed. Only because of Solver's assistance we could repair most things. But up till this day we are still having a disfunctioning homepage. Unfortunately the communications between Martin Gühmann haven't been the best last couple of months either.
Then there is more, Civilization V has not brought to Apolyton what we had hoped and expected.
Most polytubes weren't very happy with the way Civ5 turned out and continued to play civ4, civ2 or just retreated back into the off topic forums. Truth has to be told, neither did Civ5 have much impact on me, which obviously has been reflected by a lack of enthusiasm in keeping up a lively civ5 environment at Apolyton. Unfortunately, because back at the launch of Civ5 we were very enthusiastic and were able to even release some unique interviews with Firaxians and discover some scopes about the game.
So now what about the future of Apolyton?
I'll be open and plain with all of you.
I am not interested in running Apolyton all by myself, neither do I have the technical skills to maintain the servers and the site. I have always been the non-technical guy on board.
There are some options I'd like to get some feedback on:
1. Would there be anybody on Apolyton who has the technical skills to maintain the server and the software, and is fully reliable? I know people who have the skills and I know people who are reliable. Keep in mind that this reliability is very important to me.
2. What is the general opinion about asking Solver, who helped us so good during the hack, to jump on this ship? He's got the skills and he is one of the most reliable guys in the Civ-universe. Yet he's also the co-owner and admin of weplayciv.
3. What would be a good procedure to close down Apolyton. It's clear that this is not something we can from one day to another. Some of Apolyton's content has value to the Civ-community in general. Some sites may want to take it over from us. Yet as well our forums host some activities that is valuable to some, just because it covers their day to day life. Perhaps Apolyton can move into an online archive in a couple of months, just to stay that way for another couple of months, followed by deletion. What are your ideas?
A 4th option could be to transfer the ownership of Apolyton to someone completely new.
I put it down here though I must admit that I'm not a big fan of that option. Apolyton contains a lot of very sensitive private data that I do not trust into the hands of someone I hardly know. This contains both my private data, including banking accounts, etc. and of course all those 100,000+ user profiles stored in our databases.
Fortunately this is not a matter of financial issues. Apolyton is not making any profits but neither is it costing us too much money, if it is losing money at all.
Apolyton is currently owned by Robert Plomp and Martin Gühmann, both own 50%.
I reach out to our community because communications between the both of us have been lacking and decisions need to be made.
Robert
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