What You Need
Binary newsreaders like SABnzbd and NZBGet are built for downloading files. Text discussion requires a different kind of newsreader — one that can browse newsgroup headers, display threaded conversations, compose messages, and handle quoting. The good news is there are solid free options for every platform.
You also need a Usenet provider that allows posting. Many providers restrict or charge extra for this. NewsDemon includes free posting with every plan — text and binary — so you're covered with any NewsDemon account.
Step by Step
Choose a Text Newsreader
You need a newsreader that supports NNTP (the Usenet protocol) for both reading and posting. Here are the best options:
Mozilla Thunderbird
Thunderbird is primarily an email client, but it has full Usenet support built in. Add a "newsgroup account" in Account Settings, enter your NewsDemon server details, and you can subscribe to groups, read threaded conversations, and post replies. The interface will feel familiar if you've used any email client. It handles threading well, supports kill files (called "message filters"), and allows you to configure your posting identity separately from your email identity.
Pan
Pan is a dedicated Usenet newsreader — not an email client with Usenet bolted on. It's fast, handles large groups efficiently, supports scoring (a more sophisticated version of kill files), and works well for both text reading and binary downloads. If you're on Linux and want a GUI newsreader, Pan is the best choice.
Forte Agent / Free Agent
Agent was the gold standard for Usenet text reading in the 1990s and 2000s. It's still maintained and still works. Excellent threading, powerful filtering, clean interface. Free Agent is the free version with slightly fewer features. If you're on Windows and want a dedicated newsreader rather than using Thunderbird, this is the one.
slrn
A text-mode newsreader for the command line. Fast, configurable, keyboard-driven. Popular with long-time Usenet users and anyone who prefers working in a terminal. Supports scoring, threading, and custom macstrings. If you're comfortable with vim-style keybindings, you'll feel at home.
tin
Another terminal-based reader, common on UNIX systems. Simpler than slrn, good for straightforward reading and posting. Often pre-installed on university UNIX systems.
Configure Your Server
Enter these settings in your newsreader's account or server configuration:
Server: news.newsdemon.com
Port: 563 (SSL) — or 443, 80, 81, 9119 as alternates
SSL/TLS: Enabled (always recommended)
Connections: 2–4 is plenty for text groups (you don't need 50 for reading text)
Username & Password: From your NewsDemon welcome email
These are the same credentials you'd use for binary access — there's no separate account for text groups.
Download the Group List
After connecting, your newsreader will download the full list of available newsgroups. This takes a few minutes the first time — there are over 110,000 groups. Once downloaded, the list is cached locally and only updates for changes.
Subscribe to Groups
Browse or search the list for topics that interest you. Subscribe to the ones you want to follow. Some starting points:
Computing: comp.lang.python, comp.lang.c, comp.os.linux.misc, comp.security.misc
Science: sci.physics, sci.math, sci.crypt, sci.space.policy
Recreation: rec.arts.sf.written, rec.food.cooking, rec.music.classical
Social: soc.culture.*, soc.history
Debate: talk.politics.misc, talk.philosophy.misc
Alt: alt.folklore.urban, alt.fan.*, alt.music.*
Your newsreader will download the message headers for subscribed groups. You can then browse subjects, open threads, and read messages.
Read and Navigate Threads
Text newsgroups use threading — replies are linked to the message they respond to, forming a tree structure. Your newsreader displays this as an indented list. You can follow a conversation branch, skip to the next thread, or collapse threads you're not interested in.
Most newsreaders support scoring or kill files — rules that automatically highlight, de-prioritize, or hide messages based on author, subject, or keywords. If someone is posting garbage, add them to your kill file and they vanish from your view without affecting anyone else.
Post and Reply
To reply to a message, your newsreader will open a compose window with the original message quoted. Edit the quote to include only the relevant parts (don't quote the entire message — this is a core netiquette rule), write your response beneath, and send. Your reply will propagate to every Usenet server on the network.
To start a new thread, compose a new message and select the newsgroup(s) to post it to. Give it a descriptive subject line. Your message will appear as a new top-level thread in those groups.
Posting Identity and Privacy
When you post to a newsgroup, your message includes headers that identify you. Here's what's visible to other users:
What other users can see
From: header — This contains the name and email address you configure in your newsreader. It can be anything — a real name, a pseudonym, a throwaway email. Whatever you put here is what other users see.
Message-ID: — A unique identifier for your post, generated by your newsreader or server. It doesn't reveal personal information but can be used to track posts by the same person across groups.
What NewsDemon does NOT expose
NewsDemon does not inject your IP address into the NNTP-Posting-Host header or any other article header. Some providers do this, which means every post reveals the poster's network location. We don't.
Combined with SSL encryption on the connection, your ISP cannot see what you're posting or reading, and other Usenet users cannot determine your IP address or physical location from your posts.
Best practices for privacy
Use a pseudonym and a dedicated email address (or a non-functional address like [email protected]) in your newsreader's From: configuration. With NewsDemon's SSL and no-IP-injection policy, this gives you strong pseudonymity. Our security page covers the technical details.
Netiquette: How to Not Get Flamed
Usenet has decades of established social norms. Violating them won't get you banned (there's no central authority to do that), but it will get you ignored, corrected, or flamed. Here are the basics:
- Lurk before you post
- Read a group for a few days before contributing. Every group has its own culture, recurring topics, and unwritten rules. Learn them before jumping in.
- Read the FAQ
- Many groups have a periodically posted FAQ that answers common questions. Read it before asking something that's been answered hundreds of times.
- Quote selectively
- When replying, quote only the specific part of the message you're responding to. Delete everything else. Quoting entire messages (especially multi-level nested quotes) is one of the fastest ways to annoy people. Write your reply below the quoted text, not above it ("bottom-posting" or "interleaved posting" — not "top-posting").
- Use descriptive subject lines
- "Help!" is not a subject line. "NZBGet failing PAR2 repair on large files" is. People decide whether to read your post based on the subject.
- Stay on topic
- Post to the group that matches your topic. Don't cross-post to unrelated groups. If a conversation drifts off-topic, change the subject line or move it to a more appropriate group.
- Don't post in all caps
- IT MEANS YOU'RE SHOUTING. This convention is older than the web — it started on Usenet.
- Don't attach binaries to text groups
- Text newsgroups are for text. Binary attachments (files, images) belong in the binary newsgroup hierarchies (alt.binaries.*). Posting a 50 MB file to a text group will not make you friends.
- Sign your posts (optional but traditional)
- Many Usenet users include a short signature (sig) at the bottom of their posts, separated from the body by "-- " (dash dash space on its own line). This is a Usenet convention that newsreaders recognize for automatic handling. Keep it short — four lines or fewer is the traditional guideline.
How Articles Propagate
When you post a message, your newsreader sends it to your provider's server (in this case, NewsDemon). The server assigns it a unique Message-ID, timestamps it, and begins propagating it to other servers via peering connections. Within minutes to hours, your message reaches every major Usenet server worldwide.
This is fundamentally different from posting on a web forum or social media platform. On Reddit, your post lives on Reddit's servers. On Usenet, your post is copied to thousands of independent servers. No single server can delete it from the network (though individual servers can remove their own copy). No single entity controls the propagation.
NewsDemon currently retains articles for 5,695+ days. A post you write today will be readable on our servers for over 15 years. Other providers may retain for shorter or longer periods, but the decentralized nature of Usenet means copies exist across many servers simultaneously.
Text Groups vs. Binary Groups
Usenet has two broad categories of newsgroups: text and binary.
Text groups (comp.*, sci.*, rec.*, soc.*, talk.*, misc.*, humanities.*, and most of alt.*) are for discussion. Messages are plain text. This is the original purpose of Usenet and the focus of this guide.
Binary groups (alt.binaries.*) are for sharing files. Articles in binary groups contain encoded file data (using yEnc encoding) split across multiple messages. Binary newsreaders like SABnzbd and NZBGet are designed to reassemble these. Binary groups generate the vast majority of Usenet traffic by volume — 500+ TB of new data stored daily across the network.
You can use the same NewsDemon account for both. The same server, same credentials, same SSL connections. The only difference is which newsreader you use — a text reader for discussion, a binary reader for file downloads. Some people run both simultaneously.
FAQ
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Every NewsDemon plan includes free posting, 50 SSL connections, and access to all 110,000+ newsgroups. No extra charge for text group access.
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