One issue is that people seem almost too "forgiving" of genuine no-hope cases. There is enough information out there (on this forum and elsewhere) for anyone who truly cares to learn the difference between a valuable domain name and a worthless one to gain a first-class education. Everything they will ever need to know has already been written and is FREELY available if they only bother to look (which is in massive contrast to 10-15 years ago, when some of us got our start and had to pretty much make it up as we went along)
Indeed, there have been a few "newbies" who have come to Acorn and showed a willingness to learn and have blossomed as a result. And that's great to see. But in domaining, as in law, "ignorance is (or should be) no excuse".
It helps nobody to pretend that a domain name that is either A) worth £0.00 or B) a lawsuit waiting to happen is anything other than a huge "fail" - and sidestepping that in appraisal threads just adds fuel to a dangerous fire of misplaced belief in the ability of the thread originator to pick winning names.
Better a short, sharp shock followed either by a rapid reassessment/readjustment which may eventually lead to success and/or a quick exit from an industry which has shown time and time again that randomly registering names is about the quickest way to waste money known to man, short of stepping out on the front lawn and setting fire to a pile of cash.
I believe it's this relentless cascade of repetitive, virtually unchallenged false hope that has driven a lot of regulars who used to post some great material to leave the forum and others to post only sporadically.
If a domain name is worth nothing, zip, nada, then have the decency to call it as it is. There's no particular need to be rude about it, but there's also no need to pretend that the reality of the situation is something it's not.
Yes, things are harder now than they have ever been, especially for those seeking to break into the industry. But that's just a "fact", something to be faced up to. It doesn't mean that newcomers should be given more slack to somehow "compensate" them for having basically missed the boat - if anything, it's the opposite since it's harder than ever to put together a valuable portfolio and easier than ever to tilt at windmills...