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Keeping Web Discussions Open, Yet Civilized?

gsnedders asks: "With the rise of 'Web 2.0' and user created content, often in the form of comments, how do you keep the discussion open, yet civilized? I've found Slashdot's moderation to be very good — the good stuff gets moderated up, and the bad stuff down. On Digg, correct and valid information often gets dugg down, and offensive comments up, showing that having an open moderation system doesn't always work. However, moderation like on Slashdot, requires a large numbers of users to have enough moderators without giving everyone moderator access, therefore making it impossible to use on smaller sites. How can you keep the discussion civilized, while keeping commenting open, and not requiring large numbers of users for the moderation to work?"

8 of 156 comments (clear)

  1. Group think is a con? by Lazerf4rt · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What's wrong with group think? If you had an original idea, and nobody took it seriously, you might claim that it's due to group think. But if your idea got adopted, and became part of social consciousness, that would be due to group think too. So you can't really call it a con. It's just always present in discussions. If you really wanted to avoid it, you probably wouldn't discuss at all.

  2. As one who leans to the right on slashdot... by ChePibe · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've found this to be somewhat true, but not always. If a post contains direct criticism of the DNC or praise/direct agreement for Bush, you can count on a few "flamebait" or "overrated" moderations.

    For some posts, such as this one I receive all kinds of complaints about how "right wing" I must be to dare complain that the DNC still hasn't come up with anything resembling a platform. I receive angry ALL CAPS COMMENTS - DON'T YOU KNOW WHAT'S HAPPENING, IDIOT!?! responses. Still, it at least retained a respectable 4, insightful.

    Then there's posts like this one which held onto its 5, insightful, but received responses like this where I'm reminded from someone about the left that I shouldn't "THINK", just do whatever the left says because what is happening is wrong, WRONG!

    And all along I thought the right was supposed to be anti-intellectual...

    I don't really care about the biases among editors, moderators, or whatever. I post what I think, and receive moderations accordingly.

    I do, however, remember this when it comes to meta moderation time and, while acting within the rules, I act accordingly when I see posts modded inappropriately.

    The moderation system, however, consists really of choir preachers - people mod up what they want to hear and mod down what they don't. That's all it comes down to.

  3. Re:Moderation is the key (most times) by SuperKendall · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Slashdot...People come to Slashdot really for the comments because I think most of the readers are articulate and can provide something interesting/insightful to a story

    Totally true. People complain about the moderation but really it generally works out pretty well. Someone else posted about an anti-conservative slant here and that is true; but moderators do mod up some conservative views and so even that is not as bad as it could be, you can get both sides of things at least some of the time.

    Digg.
    I think Digg has a "fair" moderation system. One can see that it is fair to you if you think like most of the Digg users.


    The second part is sure true. Digg is like a flock of starlings, all moving alike... Digg I think is being utterly overrun but anti-conservitive thought with the most crackpot people getting stories onto the front page with regularity. I'm sure they'll do just fine with only half the people in the US reading it but it's really too bad.

    It's not just liberal/consertive either, it's large blocks of momentium on all kinds of issues like macs/PC's, Microsoft in general, so on and so forth. It makes the front page seem kind of crazy for a variety of reasons and makes all sorts of comments take giant hits even if they are somewhat insightful but generally don't agree with popular opinion. The Slashdot ceiling/floor on moderation is a great thing in this regard as no comment can every be so buried it cannot be dug up; or so elevated that later evidence cannot bury something moderated high that turns out to simply be wrong,

    Imagine wanting to go back to read a story in three days - would you choose Slashdot or Digg? I feel like after three days the Slashdot commentary would be kind of polished, whereas the Digg comments would look like a funhouse - all distorted. I pretty much never read Digg stories older than a day but afer a long trip I'll scan back through a week or two of Slashdot.

    Fark.
    I think that Fark has a "poor" moderation system. They let any yahoo express his or hers opinion. I think that the majority of Farkers are jobless alcoholics anyway...


    I suppose the real question is; would any better moderation of Fark improve the aulity of people commenting there? Not sure it would.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  4. Re:Things that have been sucessful by rolfwind · · Score: 2, Interesting

    While there is groupthink anywhere, having participated in both, I think something like Digg is more prone to groupthink than /. is.

    I have seen /. consistently promote comments that went against standard group mentality, while at Digg comments I deem intelligent are shot down and many comments that I think are inane or at least plainly obvious get promoted to the heavens.

    There, it doesn't even seem worth it to come up with anything more than a one sentence post (the other problem being the threads).

    Part of it is that Digg doesn't have comments like "+1 Funny", "+1 Insightful", or "-1 Redundant" or any of that. Just points up and points down. Also, points up to infinity and down to negative infinity (or whatever the range is) gets ridiculous and really promotes group think I would say.

    Don't get me wrong, there are things I like about Digg, hence I spend some time there. Things like group participation on articles bought to the front minus recent scandals and that there is not so much slowdown at night like on /. (get more international editors please, the world does not sleep when you do...)

    I would think a blend of the two systems would be ideal, but /. has digg beat on moderation as far as I am concerned.

  5. Change the format of the replies by Jack+Pallance · · Score: 2, Interesting
    On Slashdot, comments are either hidden (as a subject line, or "Below Threshhold"), or displayed in their entirety.

    Perhaps instead of showing comments in their entirety, you could show previews. The length of the preview could correspond to the mod points. For instance:

    -1 = Below Threshold

    0 = user name only

    1 = user name + Subject Line Only

    2 = user name + Subject Line and first line of comment (Or x number of characters)

    3 = user name + Subject Line and first two lines of comment (Or x times 2 number of characters)

    5 = Comment posted in its entirety

    The usernames or subjects could be links to the entire comments for when the reader is interested.

    The benefit would be an overall improvement in quality of post per inch of screen space.

  6. Re:This is a timely thread by hankwang · · Score: 2, Interesting
    This post will almost certainly get modded into the basement, but what the hell.

    I wish people didn't use this type of karma-whoring phrases. If the post is not utter flamebait or troll, it has a fair chance of being modded up by a moderator who wants to prove to himself that he can value a comment that doesn't agree with his own opinion. (I think I've done that myself one of the first times I had mod points. Now I never mod such posts, even if I think they deserve it based on the rest of the content.)

  7. Groupthink solution: ("Left-handed whuffie"?) by s-gen · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If a post is simultaneously receiving loads of troll and insightful mods, the community is probably split along some axis. (left/right, mac/linux, sick-sense-of-humor/think-of-the-children, etc, etc). Groupthink is enforced when, for example, a well thought out conservative post is labelled "troll" because 6 liberal moderators have outvoted 4 conservative ones.

    If however you could identify the prejudices of the moderators, you could build a system which didn't enforce groupthink like this. Instead, a well thought out conservative post could be labelled (say) +5 insightful/+5 conservative. A good, balanced comment would get votes from both sides (+5 insightful/neutral), out-and-out troll still gets canned, etc.

    It could let you see *good* posts by people you disagree with. Or, if you're sure your mind is closed on some matter, it could let you NOT see them.

    Lots of problems, of course. eg... identifying the axes, identifying the prejudices of the moderators (does the system let them tick a "conservative" box, or does the system work out for itself where the moderators are, or even what the axes are?)

  8. Conservatism is the opposite of ideology by donscarletti · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Conservatism in its purist form is the opposite of ideology, it is a type of cynicism. It is the belief that the average decision made by a human is more likely to be bad than good. Ideology is a strong belief in a cause and the desire to base ones choices around this belief.

    People like Dubya get mislabeled as conservatives as a bit of a euphemism, but conservative governments are careful, slow to act and even indecisive. George Bush however is a cowboy and could never be any such things (with the exception of Hurricane Katrina I guess), he likes to start silly wars with dubious causes, he tries to make the rich richer at the expense of the poor, this isn't conservative at all, this is changing the status quo. A conservative government would have stayed out of Iraq and just bombed Afghanistan until they were sorry for helping Osama.

    If you want to see conservative, you need to look at Japan, in Japan the bureaucracy has the power so nothing ever happens, laws take decades to pass (child porn was only banned in 1998 IIRC) and havn't invaded a country for 65 years. The American government knew that if Japan was to loose its bad habits its government would need to be slowed to the point of total stagnation and now they are a nice country that everyone but China likes.

    And by the way, how can something be biased because it is totally open? A person can be biased for sure, but society as a whole tends to be right about most things political, because politics are dictated by society. Which leads me to my next point, society has thought some really crazy things over the years, but its always been right about it. These days ephebophilia is out but homosexuality is in, who could have seen that coming a century ago? Back in the 70s western women were fighting for equal rights at the same time Muslim women were putting their headscarves on for the first time in almost a millennium. Portugal deposed its hardline Catholic government at almost the same time as Iran had its Islamic revolution and brought about a theocracy. Being conservative is to acknowledge society's indecisiveness and leave it alone. This is cynicism to the highest degree.

    --
    When Argumentum ad Hominem falls short, try Argumentum ad Matrem