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What Your Online Comments Say About You

circletimessquare writes: The New York Times has a piece summarizing some recent research and recent discussion about the quality, or lack thereof, of online comments. "[Washington State University researchers] found that the comments on a public-service announcement about vaccination affected readers' attitudes as strongly as the P.S.A. itself did. When commenters were identified by their level of expertise with the subject (i.e. as doctors), their comments were more influential than the P.S.A.s. Online readers may put a lot of stock in comments because they view commenters 'as kind of similar to themselves,' said Mr. Weber — 'they're reading the same thing, commenting on the same thing.' And, he added, many readers, especially those who are less Internet-savvy, assume commenters 'know something about the subject, because otherwise they wouldn't be commenting on it.' The mere act of commenting, then, can confer an unearned aura of credibility."

3 of 267 comments (clear)

  1. Re:First Post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    First post is dangerous dude!! You can trust me I'm an internet commenter.

  2. Breathtaking by nospam007 · · Score: 4, Funny

    'DrPhil' as handle more 'influential than 'BigDickForHire' ?

    Who would have thought.

  3. Drink by occasional_dabbler · · Score: 3, Funny
    The number and length of my comments increase and their quality decreases in proportion to how much I've drunk. This is a rare, sober comment...

    Plus, obligatory XKCD

    --
    "Our opponent is an alien starship packed with atomic bombs," I said. "we have a protractor"