via Google Wave Blog by acd on 4/22/10
One of the more glaringly obvious missing features over Google Wave's short public life has been the ability to remove participants from waves. It has several obvious benefits:- Removing someone who you accidentally added
- Removing yourself from a wave that's no longer interesting
- Removing someone who's not participating in good spirit or at all
- Removing another person as a courtesy when the wave is no longer relevant to them

But what if she had already opened the wave by the time you removed her from it? Well, consider a different scenario: someone adds you to a wave promising they'll fetch the water if you'll whitewash their fence. You open the wave, agree to the proposition, and proceed with the whitewashing. Yards of fence later, that someone removes you from the wave. You certainly would want to have a record of the deal ('It totally happened')! Since you had opened the wave before you were removed from it, you retain a read-only copy of the wave up to the time you were removed. You can still play back the wave, but you won't see future changes or be able to make further contributions.
We carefully designed the feature so neither the person who removed you, nor others on the wave can see whether or not you have opened the wave. They can only tell you have been removed and that you no longer see changes to the wave (unless, of course, someone adds you back).Finally, you also have the option to remove yourself from a wave. We've all been added to conversation threads that turned out to be unimportant or uninteresting. With email you have to ask someone else to take you off the thread, or set up a filter to stop those messages from appearing in your inbox. Now in Wave, when your friend adds you to a wave about the dinner party he's having the same weekend that you're out of town for business, you can simply remove yourself from the wave and you won't have a constant reminder of all the fun you'll be missing.We hope the considerable amount of effort we've put into designing and building this feature increases your productivity and ability to organize and share waves the way you want. Wave on!Posted by Dhanji R. Prasanna, Software Engineer, Google Wave team
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