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In Defense of the Anonymous Commenter

Hugh Pickens writes "Doug Feaver has an interesting story in the Washington Post 'in defense of the anonymous, unmoderated, often appallingly inaccurate, sometimes profane, frequently off point and occasionally racist reader comments that washingtonpost.com allows to be published at the end of articles and blogs.' Feaver says that during his seven-year tenure as editor and executive editor of washingtonpost.com he kept un-moderated comments off the site, but now, four years after retiring, he says he has come to think that online comments are a terrific addition to the conversation, and that journalists need to take them seriously. 'The subjects that have generated the most vitriol during my tenure in this role are race and immigration,' writes Feaver. 'But I am heartened by the fact that such comments do not go unchallenged by readers. In fact, comment strings are often self-correcting and provide informative exchanges.' Feaver says that comments are also a pretty good political survey. 'The first day it became clear that a federal bailout of Wall Street was a real prospect, the comments on the main story were almost 100 percent negative. It was a great predictor of how folks feel, well out in front of the polls. We journalists need to pay attention to what our readers say, even if we don't like it. There are things to learn.'"

47 of 198 comments (clear)

  1. political leanings by Speare · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It's an interesting indicator of the swing and countervailing political views of a given paper. I've noticed that in "blue state" papers, the comments are often very conservative and red-meat. Conversely, browse a rural paper and you'll find quite a bit of commenting coming from a relatively blue/liberal point of view. It's almost entirely ugly illiterate trash, but it's an outlet for those who may feel oppressed in the general population in which they live.

    --
    [ .sig file not found ]
    1. Re:political leanings by moderatorrater · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I always thought it probably had to do with the fact that the editors who choose which letters to print would want to choose a balanced view anyway, so they'd print as many of one side as they would the other, regardless of the actual ratio that came in.

  2. The value of First Post by mangu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    there is no value in "First post!"

    I beg to disagree. A First Post is the perfect place to put a reply where it will be seen.

    No one reads anything beyond the twentieth or so reply to an article, if you don't reply to one of the first posts it doesn't matter how funny, interesting, or insightful it is, no one will read it.

    And it helps if you change the subject line. From my experience, a reply with a new subject line is much more likely to get a positive moderation than a "Re: ... " subject.

    1. Re:The value of First Post by stonewallred · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Not true. I usually read every comment at a viewing range of -1 up. The funniest stuff is usually later anyway. It is the first posters who are either stupid trying to be funny, or wanna-be intellectuals trying to show their "knowledge". Of course you also have the ones racing to throw their off topic BS up there too, so the can be 'seen" by the ruling elites of the Illuminati.

    2. Re:The value of First Post by AmigaMMC · · Score: 2, Informative

      Whenever I get moderator status (once a week or so) I make it a point to read toward the end of the posts in order to give a chance to someone who writes an insightful or funny post to get brownie points.

  3. Re:The non-value of First Post by HexOxide · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I also have to beg to disagree, because I said there is no value in "First Post" meaning, people who post solely saying "First Post" as opposed to saying there is no value in _the_ first post.

    --
    Can I leave this box empty?
  4. This just in... by LordKaT · · Score: 5, Funny

    Journalist learns that other peoples opinions count. News at 11!

    1. Re:This just in... by Z00L00K · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Journalists learns which articles that draws the most comments and therefore are the most controversial. This means that they get an indication about what may be disturbing for people.

      But sometimes we also need informative articles and not only the disturbing articles.

      As for anonymous comments - they may be valid, but it must be possible to moderate those articles to get rid of the noise and the worst forms. And in controversial questions the availability of anonymous comments may be a life saver. It must be possible to express an opinion, at least in a polite way without revealing your identity. The question is sometimes more important than who the messenger is.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
  5. I disagree by guyminuslife · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As one who frequents it...frequently...the Washington Post comment section really is a cesspit. Imagine what you would get if the Slashdot mod system worked in reverse, and people were karma whores for "flamebait," "troll," and "offtopic" tags. It isn't 4chan. But it's amazing that it's on the same site as one of the country's most respectable news outlets.

    Of course, Feaver's points would carry more weight if the boards were structured differently. For instance, if WaPo had nested threads instead of a flat message board, you might see more of the "correction" and "dialogue" between different posters than you otherwise do. As opposed to ranting, which is what happens when I...I mean, some person...stands on a soapbox without having dialogue. Empty flames cast into a void.

    On the other hand, I'll say with a straight face that I think Slashdot has the best comment section around, if not for the quality of the posters themselves, then because it's good at suppressing and elevating voices based on the wisdom of crowds.

    But yet I go back there again and again...

    --
    I don't believe in time. It's a grand conspiracy designed to sell watches.
    1. Re:I disagree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      As one who frequents it...frequently...the Washington Post comment section really is a cesspit. Imagine what you would get if the Slashdot mod system worked in reverse, and people were karma whores for "flamebait," "troll," and "offtopic" tags. It isn't 4chan. But it's amazing that it's on the same site as one of the country's most respectable news outlets.

      ...

      Amazing?

      Hardly.

      Have you ever been involved in anything the Washington Post reports? I have. Twice. Once even made the front page, albeit below the fold. The litany of inaccuracies, half-truths, made-up crap, and downright falsehoods would shock you.

      And that's for simple "factual" news.

      Wait until "journalists" get to spin news that's related to politics.

      "News" as reported by today's media is orthogonal to reality.

      So no, "one of the country's most respectable news outlets" really never has been much better than 4chan, and there's no reason whatsoever for you to be "amazed".

      Never mind the utter incompetence and lack of fact-checking.

      There's a reason why newspaper circulation is dying - it's the internet, but not for the reasons newspaper fanboys think. It's because if today's newspapers were asked to implement standards, they'd misspell the word. The internet allows much wider dissemination of data contradictory to what the mass-media spoon feeds us. And it's that flow of information that has stripped the veneer of "factual news" from organizations like The Washington Post and The New York Times.

      One wonders if that veneer was fake all along, and the only reason we used to think newspapers were accurate was the lack of other information channels.

      I strongly suspect it was.

      But now, no one wants to pay for the "privilege" of having to work to read what you know is all-too-likely to be UTTER CRAP.

    2. Re:I disagree by Mishotaki · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You disagree about the value of the comment section. You frequent the comment section. How ironic.

      I comment on stuff, even if i think my comments aren't up to par with the editorials, some people might agree with what i said, making it valuable.

      If I could, i would use a "-1 made by me" mod point on most of my posts, as they aren't really made in good english and not always relevant... But i can't always be wrong, everyone made at least a good point on something in their lives, hopefully more than once...

    3. Re:I disagree by Snark365 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And where exactly do you think we will get our news from if newspapers do die out? The internet is ripe with commenters and aggregators, but is almost entirely devoid of actual reporting. Trust me if the "evil MSM" goes, so too goes your precious internet "journalism."

      --
      I sometimes fear that I am betraying the left wing by hating coffee.
    4. Re:I disagree by massysett · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As one who frequents it...frequently...the Washington Post comment section really is a cesspit.

      Agreed. The Post comments are a total waste of time to read. I have stopped looking at them.

      Nearly always, the threads degenerate into a pile of worthless partisan, hate-filled garbage. No matter what the story is (war? Gun control? Floods? I mean, ANYTHING) the thread turns into "It's all Obama's fault" or "It's all Bush's fault" or "liberals suck" or "conservatives are evil" or "Bush is an idiot" or "Obama is a monkey." Other unmoderated comment threads, like on Politico, are similar. The posts have no thought whatsoever. It is all two-sentence nonsense. Since they are not threaded, you can't even see what the two sentences are retorting to.

      This kind of crap is not worth reading. The author of this article thinks journalists need to take these comments seriously? So, where in the story is the journalist supposed to account for racist garbage directed at Obama, or mindless hatred for conservatives? And journalists are supposed to spend their time sifting through this garbage, rather than developing stories?

      NYTimes comments are worth reading, for the same reason Slashdot comments can be worth reading: readers can catch total garbage in stories and call it out. NYTimes moderates the comments so they don't slide into utter garbage. Some of the Times bloggers respond to the comments.

      I doubt anyone at the Washington Post reads the worthless vitriol that is in their pathetic comment threads.

    5. Re:I disagree by Scrameustache · · Score: 2, Insightful

      a decade later and big companies still just throw up unthreaded message boards as if they have no idea what will happen.

      The print dinosaurs have no idea, no understanding, and no respect for anyone who does.
      They're doing too little, too late.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    6. Re:I disagree by Nazlfrag · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In Australia there is crikey.com.au that employs journalists and publishes exclusively online, I believe other sites such as the Huffington Post do the same in the States. Get a grip, the newspapers won't die, just evolve away from the paper format altogether.

    7. Re:I disagree by jakykong · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I will grant you that many news stories we read online originated on paper or from a major news reporter. But not all, and not all has to. The key is to realize that you don't need people dedicated to reporting. Instead, you need lots of people who are all over the place, who can, by chance, find the news themselves. Given an internet of users, it seems absurd to me that none of them would post interesting news they come upon. Aggregators are just a way to help that information to flow.

      I think the real key to solving the journalism problem, then, is not trying to keep full-time major journalists in business (if they want to stay around, they can compete like the rest of us), but rather, it's about getting rid of badly written libel and copyright laws that make everyone else afraid to post the news they hear about.

      Just my .02 :)

  6. Let's go, AC! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    This is your time to shine! Bring on the Tsarkon Obama reports, Yoda doll insertion tutorial, "*BSD is Dying" announcement, and the GNAA recruitment posting. Don't disappoint me!

    1. Re:Let's go, AC! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      We are torn. This does present a great chance at ruining another thread with our tripe, but we are also morally opposed to posting anything that could actually be taken as on-topic.

  7. Very similar to Letters to the Editor by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This type of interaction is what used to be part of the Letters to the Editor section of the newspaper. Before we could spam online forums with our unmoderated comments, newspapers used to publish the best responses to their stories on the old Opinion page.

    Nowadays, with that removal of editorial moderation, we are exposed directly to the effluvium and vitriol that was so carefully screened away from our eyes in those old days. Whether this is a good thing or not, I don't know.

    What I do know is that opinions of low or nil value are exposed to the light of day. With this shining light most of these errant posters are shouted down and pummeled (figuratively) by right-thinking mainstream posters.

    Whether this represents a significant change is debatable, though. Whereas unpublished letters to the editor forced these people to seek out each other underground, the new method still forces these posters to seek out forums where they are the majority. Perhaps it is Slashdot with its geeks and nerds. Or it is Free Republic with its right wingers, or its counterpart LGF. On the extreme ends you have StormFront and the ADL.

    The result is a polarization of the web, people talking only to themselves, and less of a conversation than before. When you become a "troll" for holding a contrary opinion, how easy it is to decide to seek out communities that support you rather than shout you down.

    1. Re:Very similar to Letters to the Editor by HexOxide · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't think people should be labeled as trolls simply for having a conflicting opinion. It's when they decided to voice that opinion like an asshole that they become a troll, or even completely drop the discussion and go out of their way to try and derail the discussion by posting crap like the Yoda doll or whatever it is the trolls are spamming these days.

      --
      Can I leave this box empty?
    2. Re:Very similar to Letters to the Editor by a+whoabot · · Score: 5, Interesting

      This is , who is the head of the ADL:

      "Can you be anti-Zionist and not be an anti-Semite? Almost never. Unless you can prove to me you're against nationalism. If you're one of those unique individuals in this world that's opposed to American nationalism, French nationalism, Palestinian nationalism, then you can be opposed to Jewish nationalism. Is it racist? You bet it is. Every nationalism is racist. It sets its laws of citizenship, it sets its own capital... It sets its songs, it sets its values. It is, if you will, exclusive, and you can even call it racist. But if the only nationalism in the world that is racist is Jewish nationalism, then you're an anti-Semite.. I don't want to make any apologies for it."

      Notice how what Foxman says is no different from what the Storm-Front members say about white-nationalism They say: "Yeah, white-nationalism is racism. But you can't oppose it unless you oppose nationalism of other groups: Japanese nationalism, Jewish nationalism, Arab nationalism. If the only nationalism in the world that is racist is white nationalism, then you're anti-white."

    3. Re:Very similar to Letters to the Editor by JoshuaZ · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yeah, Abe Foxman is a bit of an ass. He is incidentally wrong about the nature of nationalism. To use an obvious example, US nationalism can be non-racist in nature. And I'd be inclined to argue that one can be a nationalist for pretty much any country without being a racist. However, white-nationalism is distinct in the following ways: 1) white nationalism isn't connected to any country, but rather a desire to rule pretty much everywhere. White nationalism is fundamentally wrapped in neo-Nazi and other views where the most tolerant forms advocate large scale oppression of other groups. 2) Zionism was made in response to genuine anti-Semitism so that Jews would have somewhere to go when there was severe persecution. Let us not forget that Zionism was founded after the Dreyfus Affair http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dreyfus_Affair. Jews continue to be the target of severe anti-Semitism all over the world. And again, the ADL has helped when other groups have been persecuted. See for example part of the ADL's ongoing effort to help stop Mormon persecution. The ADL also helps run an interfaith/interethnic summer camp for highschool students. http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/04/06/a_different_kind_of_camp/. Yeah, that's real racist of them.

    4. Re:Very similar to Letters to the Editor by a+whoabot · · Score: 4, Informative

      Okay, I don't want to defend white-nationalism or Stormfront, but I just want to muddy your picture of the issue.

      Take this thread. This is the Intro to Stormfrontian(sic) white-nationalism which is affixed second to the top of the forum for anyone who wants to "know more about White Nationalism".

      The main point of the OP seems to be conspiracy theory: "the Jews" control the media and the government and are hurting all the non-Jews, especially whites. So they see themselves at the victims of anti-white sentiment among Jews and "useful idiots" among non-Jews. "Also, I should have been more clear that the Jews are using non-White immigration and Blacks to destroy White America and Europe. They want everyone dumbed down and different Gentile races at each other's throats to prevent Whites from coming together against the Jewish threat" he says.

      Notice the other poster, H2H: "Study demographic statistics and future racial population projections and you will see just how dangerous the situation has become. Again, it's not about "hate" or "Supremacy," but SURVIVAL and being able to control our own destiny. ... Remember we are not a "hate group" but a cultural and racial preservation group. In fact we are the true "Multiculturalists" and genuine believers of cultural and racial diversity. By keeping the different races and people separate the world can enjoy the diversity of the human species. ... Although Egypt and most non-white counties have nothing to worry about (except maybe Tibet), it is only White Nations that are invaded and threatened with genocide."

      It's seems clear that the general theme on Stormfront is white survival and sovereignty. It does not seem to be fundamentally connected with ruling the entire world as you say. They have this saying the 14 words which is their sometimes motto. I can't remember the exact 14 words, but it's something about securing a future for white children. It doesn't say anything about dominating others. And you're right, you can seem them extolling Nazis and Hitler too. But then you have to remember that they are Holocaust deniers; they just think Hitler was protecting white people from Jewish domination and did not try to exterminate any Jews!

      If you go to the forum which the thread was in, the one thread that was above that Intro was about how Barack Obama's church hates whites. Again, there you can see that their focus is on elites being against white people.

      The big thread down from there is on the question: "Separatist is NOT supremacist?" Notice that the first answer to the question is from "WhitePowerMom": "We want to be with our own. ... I wish no harm to other races, I wish the[m?-ed.] the same purity we strive for. I just want to be surrounded by my tribe. In fact, our way of thinking is probably the most respectful and honorable way possible. We wish to be left alone...and by way of that, to leave others alone."

      Anyway, you're right. Stormfront is not like the ADL. I think the poster that compared them did a weird thing. But I don't think white-nationalism is so clearly different from the Zionist, ADL position, as is evidenced by Foxman's comments. That white-nationalists are largely white-supremacists, you're probably right. That white-nationalism is fundamentally white-supremacist, you're probably wrong, as is evidenced by the general opinion on Stormfront about what white-nationalism is.

  8. but...... by omar.sahal · · Score: 4, Insightful

    online comments are a terrific addition to the conversation

    what if these online people express a view that does not flatter one of your advertisers. Would you take them seriously then.

  9. competition with radio by woverly · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The Washington Post has merely realized that it needs to allow ignorant posters their forum in order to compete with talk radio. I have seen little evidence that ensuing discussions necessarily iterate to rational, informed conclusions.

    Providing a forum for extreme ideas is a bit like teaching creationism in science classes.

    --
    Woverly Harris Gooch, IV CTO American Fire and Bomb, LLC
  10. More bad journalism... by kencoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am somewhat surprised that a longtime editor would make such an absolutely ridiculous statement. Apparently, the journalist (OK, editor) did not do much research before publishing his view. It is pretty common knowledge that comments on a story are not a cross section of the readers views. Most readers are passive, and do not comment on every story they read. They will only respond to those which strike at their sense of values, or that the reader strongly oppose as false (obviously, this is my reason for commenting now). If everyone who read a Slashdot story commented on it, Slashdot would need far more storage space than they use now. Almost any Blog or News Site would have ample material to reference from their comments section to demonstrate the fact that the fringes of the audience's views are echoed in the majority if the responses, and that only an exceptionally striking article will receive more of a balanced response (yes, Virginia, there is an audience).

  11. Wisdom of the Commons is Overrated by mtapman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    By definition the world is mostly made up of average people. For those of us that were products of public schools and other institutions that accepted everyone regardless of their abilities or backgrounds we can probably think back on groups that showed exactly what "average" means.

    This combines with the most common failure of unfettered democracy, the tyranny of the loud (and perhaps underemployed/bored/obsessed), to create a perfect storm of vitriol, ignorance, and selfishness in places like an open forum online.

    Quite simply, people without knowledge or experience in a field deserve less speaking time than those with knowledge and experience. If those people that are excluded from a discussion because they are ignorant or inexperienced want to participate than they should take the time to become knowledgeable and experienced in the field.

    I always like to see open discussions but I also like to see comments rated and organized so that I can sift through the crap to get to the gold, something that guyminuslife mentions is missing from the Post's website system.

    And to speak directly to a comment from the original article, the fact that the comments show the true feelings of the citizens of this country is interesting from a polling/election point of view but the details of those comments don't add much, if anything to the discussion at hand. This is especially true of indefensible positions like racist or sexist comments.

    --
    Like trees blowing in the wind.
    1. Re:Wisdom of the Commons is Overrated by L7_ · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Proper grammar, spelling and punctuation really go a long way to informing a reader about the subject. With those three things, along with logical paragraph break-down in a semi-lengthy on-topic reply you are usually going to get moderated up.

      Presentation counts for a lot, especially on topics that are complex and not completely understood by the main-stream reader. I understand that content trumps presentation, but I'd much rather read a eloquent post about something that leads me to become more interested in a topic (even if not 100% correct) than non-knowable gibberish that is technically spot-on.

      Those wrongly-informated +5s usually are well written. Well written posts are hard to down-rate.

  12. Journalists should not pay attention to readers by 517714 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Journalists should report the news as objectively as they can. Paying attention to their readers is pandering, and it results in a feedback loop with predictable consequences. We need a thoughtful critical press capable of asking hard questions and not settling for non-answers from those in the news. We need a system in which the President (and others in power) cannot exclude a journalist because he/she asks those hard questions.

    Anonymity is an interesting concept, but we should recognize that the guy up on his soapbox in Hyde Park is not anonymous even if we do not know his name.

    --
    The US government have made it clear that we have no inalienable rights; any we do not defend vigorously will be taken.
    1. Re:Journalists should not pay attention to readers by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Journalists should report the news as objectively as they can. Paying attention to their readers is pandering, and it results in a feedback loop with predictable consequences.

      This isn't a truism. Paying attention to readers can lead to pandering, or it can lead to providing factual information that reporters had assumed was well known enough to not need to be stated. I think an interesting experiment would be a paper that does allow comments and pays attention to them, and directly responds to ones that present factually incorrect information or premise conclusions upon it.

      Such an experiment might result in much more informed readers and discussion, although it would also be a lot of extra work and might drive away those who are so set in their beliefs they refuse to consider the facts.

      We need a thoughtful critical press capable of asking hard questions and not settling for non-answers from those in the news.

      Agreed. Moreover, we need a populace that demands answers both from the press and from politicians who refuse to answer direct questions. We need a populace who is willing to vote based upon which politicians actually answer questions.

      We need a system in which the President (and others in power) cannot exclude a journalist because he/she asks those hard questions.

      I'm not sure our current system isn't the best we're likely to get in that regard. We just need the public to be aware and care enough when t happens and vote the bastards out.

  13. Re:Defense?? by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Sadly, the constitutional guarantee is not equivalent to a practical ability to make anonymous comments. Yes, anyone is legally allowed to anonymously comment on whatever they want, but the question of whether or not anyone will see that comment is entirely different. You can create a website and write everything under a pseudonym, but unless you manage to get to page 1 on Google, your opinion will never be heard. On the other hand, if you write a comment on a popular website (such as slashdot), your comment will at least have a fighting chance. This is what is being defended: the system that allows you to post anonymously on the Washington Post's website, where lots of people will see the comment.

    Of course, the whole situation is a bit twisted, since you now need the permission of large media companies to make anonymous comments in a meaningful way. As the Internet becomes more popular, that will become more true.

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  14. Re:Defense?? by Beelzebud · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No one says you have a constitutional right to free speech on a privately owned message board, either.

  15. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  16. Re:Defense?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Responsibility. Saying something is a right, taking the time to think it through beforehand to make sure that it contributes positively to the discussion is a responsibility. Would that there was a little more responsibility in the exercising of quite a few rights, not just that of speech.

  17. Re:Defense?? by tobiasly · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You are confusing free speech, which is a constitutionally protected right, with the "right" to be heard by others. Such a right does not exist, nor should it. It is your responsibility that your voice is actually heard.

  18. Internet comments will terrify you. by EWAdams · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I started using the Internet when it was the ARPANET. Nice place. Interesting people. Cool projects. Then it became the Internet, then AOL hooked in, and suddenly I discovered that a large percentage of my fellow countrymen are ignorant, illogical, paranoid, quasi-literate, parochial, xenophobic, homophobic, sexist, racist, anti-intellectual believers in UFOs.

    I mean I knew they existed, but not in such numbers. The Internet is democratizing, and it sure as hell shows what's wrong with democracy.

    --
    I piss off bigots.
    1. Re:Internet comments will terrify you. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're right: he did forget to include nit-picky pedants in the original list. ;-)

    2. Re:Internet comments will terrify you. by tripmine · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ...I discovered that a large percentage of my fellow countrymen are ignorant, illogical, paranoid, quasi-literate, parochial, xenophobic, homophobic, sexist, racist, anti-intellectual believers in UFOs.

      That does seem to be the picture you get by reading people's opinions online. I find comfort in believing that the sample of opinions posted online isn't representative of the total population since it suffer from a sort of volunteer bias, where the people with the most outrageous opinions have the greater will to express those opinions to a bunch of strangers.
      Either that, or we ARE surrounded by ignorant, illogical, paranoid, quasi-literate, parochial, xenophobic, homophobic, sexist, racist, anti-intellectual believers in UFOs and are all screwed.

    3. Re:Internet comments will terrify you. by maxume · · Score: 2, Funny

      Imagine if the uncommonly intelligent were the majority!

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
  19. Downward spiral is profitable by hwyhobo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Online media, unless operating purely on subscription basis, needs ads. Ads are priced according to unique clicks and time spent on that page by readers (reader's interest). A lot of posts indicate interest. Controversial, or even flamebait articles frequently generate the longest comment trails. Scholarly, analytical articles go with scarcely a comment. Thus the tendency of some online media to adjust their content downward.

    This is not a new phenomenon. TV has learned it a while ago - witness daytime shows, Ricki Lakes, Montel Williamses, Jerry Springers, and other tabloid trash programs. The difference now is with the immediacy of feedback, hence this spiral happens much faster. Anonymous posts (and to a lesser degree even nicknamed posts, like mine), only add an accelerant to this process.

    --
    End anonymous moderation and posting on /.
  20. Moderation is a dead end by fyngyrz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Both metamoderation and moderation are a 100% waste of time on Slashdot.

    Great posts are often lost at low ratings, and terrible posts get modded up. Slashdot editors pursue vendettas against various posters, and anonymous posts, regardless of content, are rarely modded at all.

    This is a great site, with great content, but the only way to really experience that is to read at -1 and completely ignore the moderation, which simply does not work.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    1. Re:Moderation is a dead end by interkin3tic · · Score: 2, Funny

      Great posts are often lost at low ratings, and terrible posts get modded up.

      Yes, all those AC posts which are apperantly great because they're racist and off-topic are lost!

    2. Re:Moderation is a dead end by causality · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is a great site, with great content, but the only way to really experience that is to read at -1 and completely ignore the moderation, which simply does not work.

      In my personal opinion, there's no other way to experience Slashdot. The folks who don't browse at -1 have no idea what they're missing, or maybe they're the easily offended and want to reduce their stress not by becoming less easily offended (that'd be too straightforward) but by refusing to read the posts that are most likely to be trolls and such.

      At -1, I see all kinds of crap and laugh at the prospect that people actually get upset at such blatant attempts to stir shit up, and I also see the more insightful posts. A third thing I see is the very poor quality of some of the moderators. Most of them are pretty good but some of them have zero capacity to handle anything remotely controversial. It's as though they want to live in a world where all 6.5 billion people agree with them on every issue in order to avoid upsetting them, and cannot understand why this would be a horrible existence and would lead to complete stagnation of all ideas.

      Anyway, if you don't currently browse at -1, try it on for size. See if you like it. Maybe you won't like it at all or maybe you'll wonder why you didn't do that a long time ago.

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
  21. Hardly new -- USENET by redelm · · Score: 2, Insightful
    This is not a new observation. It applied just as much and was equally discussed on USENET vis-a-vis moderated vs unmoderated newsgroups.

    The fundamental problem with moderation is that it inevitably slows and stifles conversation. Often it actually loses creative contributions which really discourages contributors.

    Sometimes the slowing might be a good thing. More often, it is thought to be a good thing by people who are more annoyed by undesireable postings than worried about postings that might have been dropped. The underappreciated "false postive" problem.

  22. Moderation by jefu · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Makes me think about the moderation (and meta-moderation) process. I've thought sometimes about trying to get an "ask slashdot" post on just how moderators (and meta-m's) rate things.

  23. BBC Censorship of Opinion by MrSteveSD · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The BBC has it's own reader's comments section called "Have Your Say". It's moderated by a BBC team and it's notorious for censoring completely valid and non-abusive opinion. For example, when they had a topic on Google's participation in censorship in China, some posters pointed out that the BBC also censors things. The BBC responded to this by removing their posts (the topic that day had pre-moderation switched off, something that virtually never happens now). This prompted other people to point out the irony of the BBC removing posted about BBC censorship on a topic about censorship. The BBC then quickly pulled those posts. This prompted more similar responses and eventually the BBC gave up.

    These days all of the topics are premoderated and if they don't like your opinion, it won't go up. Those posts pointing out cases of BBC censorship would never have made it onto the website. For example, I made a recent post on the topic of How should the police handle protests? (coming after a protester died after being assaulted by the riot police). I pointed out that assaults on unarmed and non-violent protesters are routine, that the media knows it and that they are only writing about it this time because someone died. The post was rejected without explanation (as all rejections are).

    I firmly believe that members of the public should be able to make posts on news stories without being pre-moderated by some faceless team of people with rather nebulous posting rules. I think if we could make posts on any news topic (e.g. each news item could have a discuss button) on the BBC (or any other outlet) it could really affect the way they report. For example, during the massive Israeli military assault on Gaza earlier in the year, the BBC website was plastered with images clearly showing the use of white Phosphorus. The problem was that despite these clear images, and despite people writing in and pointing it out, the BBC refused to use the term "white phosphorus" for a whole week. Would they have been able to get away with that if the top-rated post under their Gaza news stories was about White Phosphorus being used?

  24. And here's exhibit A! by EWAdams · · Score: 2, Funny

    Can't capitalize, can't punctuate. The shift key is just there for decoration, isn't it?

    People like you were extremely few and far between when it was just the ARPANET.

    --
    I piss off bigots.