To answer the original question ... "No".
For five years my paternal family tree showed my connections all the way back to the 1590s in Dorset. There were hundreds of them and last year I found out that none of them were related. I had started with the wrong paternal grandfather; a fact that was only revealed when the 1911 census finally appeared. Goodness knows how many people have copied these erroneous connections.
When I view other trees (usually via Ancestry's "hints" function) I can see many connections that are very different to mine. I place no reliability on the researches of others and almost never import their "facts" into my tree. However, I do find it them a useful way to suggest terms to include in my own search that then reveal records my own efforts have not revealed. So, a big "Thank you" to those of you that do share your trees.
I am puzzled by those of you place your findings out there in cyberspace only to complain when others copy them. The world is large enough to contain lots of individuals that would meet any criteria you might choose to deploy to define "strange". Why then be grumpy if some of these "
strangers" use and abuse your data? You put it out there for all the world to see. Why then be surprised when one of those people that are "relation hoovers" alights on your data and copies it indiscriminately, often making two and two add up to 100 (unless you live in a binary world when it does!).
As for rude or grumpy responses, why not be thankful that you don't live in their world? Almost everyone you know isn't like that so don't dwell on the inevitable odd one or two.
I wish all of you a very merry Christmas and much success in the coming year in finding that elusive cousin/aunt/grand relation.
