Hatemongering Becoming A Problem On Orkut 585
jaquesparrow writes "Orkut is a well known beta experiment, an invite only environment based on social networks. Recently it has been reported that hate and racism is proliferating on Orkut. Besides the story in the Wilmington Star, the International Herald Tribune also has commentary on the situation." From the article: "For Google, the trouble on Orkut - which is still in beta, or test, form - could easily escalate. A prosecutor in Brazil, where the service is especially popular, has already initiated an investigation into some of the more virulent Orkut sites."
Hatred (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hatred (Score:4, Insightful)
Rather simplistic explanation (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hatred (Score:3, Insightful)
We won't understand why people are racist and how to change that situation if all we do is force them to shut
Re:Hatred (Score:3, Insightful)
Possibly true, but what value to make such a statement? Then one could just rephrase the PP instead of saying 'hatred is endemic' to saying 'insecurity is endemic to the human animal'.
One could also riposte by pointing out organisms that are secure never evolve, either. Not all evolution is improvement, of course. But it might be said that since the nature of organisms in a zero-sum world is to compete for resources, and the evolutionary advantage goes
Re:Hatred (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hatred (Score:3, Insightful)
I disagree. Praising someone does not necessarily require putting others down. If I say 'he's good at something' I may as well forget about the others. What if I praise the only painter in the world? According to you, it would be impossible, because I would not have other painters to compare him/her to.
Re:Hatred (Score:3, Informative)
So there is no objective good and evil?
So murdering random people in your apartment building is just as "good" as helping an old lady cross the street?
Racism is just as good as tolerance?
Dictatorship is just as good as Democracy?
No wonder so many "progressive" people
Re:Hatred (Score:3, Insightful)
We're all one species down here on the planet Earth, and regardless of any "race" or "nationality", we're all essentially the same. There can be certain universal human truths, there can be human rights.
To say that Democracy is okay for Europeans, and that Dictatorship is okay for people in Africa, is a fundamentally flawed argument. Africans and Europeans aren't that different -- they're essentially identical.
Re:Hatred (Score:4, Insightful)
I think hatemongers and racists are pretty lousy excuses for human beings, and have spent a fair amount of time working against them. But I do it by encouraging fair and open and free discussion of their ideas and exposing how pitiful and lame those ideas are.
I am all for Nazis being allowed to have a parade in Berkeley... and for everyone else in town to come out and laugh at their lame asses.
Re:Hatred (Score:3, Interesting)
This is, I think, a word which we need to treat very carefully, with a mind to its historical use.
I'm bound to ask:
Was the upsurge in German nationalism and xenophobia in the wake of the First World War a product of overpopulation and overcrowding within an inadequate living space? Hitler certainly thought so, and made that idea crucial to his doctrine [wikipedia.org]. But I tend to think the real sources of sociolog
Hotbed of bigotry? (Score:5, Insightful)
Look, in countries with real ethnic tensions---Yugoslavia, Iraq---a large proportion of the people will, every so often, get up and kill their neighbors, who've lived next to them for centuries.
In America, once a group of funny-speaking immigrants (Bosnians, Irish, whatever) has been here for two generations or so, they're just as white as everyone else. Our remnant bigotry comes from the notion of race, which is sort of like "ethnicity for dummies", as it depends on being able to identify someone from fifty paces.
And I should point out that we have racial tensions in big cities which are thickly developed, and which are frequently (Los Angeles) terribly segregated. Note that Los Angeles was the site of the most recent significant civil unrest in America.
America may have bigotry, but we do not have bigotry like they have in other places. It's more dumbed-down. How predictable.
--grendel drago
Re:Honesty. (Score:4, Insightful)
Speak for yourself. I've noticed that many racists try to justify their hatred by claiming that everyone feels the same way. I suppose people just want to feel "normal" and not the exception. Well, let me tell you something: You are the exception. Racism is a learned behavior and you are a part of an increasingly small minority of indoctrinated people.
Your "science" is also horribly flawed. Here are a choice quote from the AAA [aaanet.org]:
Evidence from the analysis of genetics (e.g., DNA) indicates that most physical variation, about 94%, lies within so-called racial groups. Conventional geographic "racial" groupings differ from one another only in about 6% of their genes. This means that there is greater variation within "racial" groups than between them. In neighboring populations there is much overlapping of genes and their phenotypic (physical) expressions.
Re:Honesty. (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm sure there are in fact a number of people out there who are to some extent racist and hide their true feelings because those feelings aren't popular. There is likely a whole spectrum of racist attitudes from very minor to very extreme. Nevertheless, that doesn't mean that there aren't ANY people who truly aren't racist.
Why is it... (Score:5, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why is it... (Score:3, Funny)
Seen this before... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Seen this before... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Seen this before... (Score:2)
Re:Seen this before... (Score:3, Funny)
. o O ( that'll show him. now i just need to click this "post anonymously" button, teehee. )
My two cents regarding "trolls". (Score:3, Insightful)
I am a troll and I agree (Score:2, Informative)
As a long time internet troll I couldn't agree more. I don't troll because I like to write (I do like to write but that's not enough). I troll because I love to read responses. And that's pretty much all. No responses, no fun.
Re:I am a troll and I agree (Score:5, Insightful)
Trolling isn't power. It's the sign of a kid holed up in a basement since he's gotten his butt kicked ten too many times for being unable to keep his sociopathic mouth shut. You think it's cute. Everyone else on the planet thinks it's a maladjusted waste of time. That you find it to be high entertainment says much more about you than your "audience".
Perhaps. (Score:4, Interesting)
Klerck was a successful troll, even though all he did was crapflood with that stupid "page widening" stuff. But it was because of him that the lameness filter was added.
The Wikipedia article on the GNAA [wikipedia.org] (which mentions the structural changes the GNAA made to Slashdot by their trolling) has been put up for deletion more than any other article. If the article is deleted, they "win" by making Wikipedia betray its principles. If the article stays, they "win" by being advertised on Wikipedia.
At least, that's what trolling seems like to me. As a troll, what's your take?
--grendel drago
Re:Seen this before... (Score:5, Interesting)
Why not implement a type of self-censorship by the memebers of the sort that Slashdot uses? There certainly is enough hatemongering going on here, and Slashdot is far from perfect, but it seems to be evolving towards something that sort of works. Thoughts?
Re:Seen this before... (Score:5, Insightful)
Because there is one Slashdot community; but thousands of Orkuts. You choose which to belong to. So for instance, what kind of people would you find in the "All niggers/faggots/Arabs/Catholics/etc. must die" group? Not a normal cross-section of society who might moderate the views expressed.
Actually, I don't see there is a need to censor these groups at all. They exist, the views expressed are repugnant; but they are not broadcast and are accessible only to the invited members of that group. Obviously law enforcement can infiltrate them to see if they're planning anythng in the real world.
Re:Seen this before... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Seen this before... (Score:3, Insightful)
I run a popular forum, and I find that picking the right moderators to keep the board clean of filth is not an easy task. Once you find the right folks to help moderate, it's all cake from there.
Re:Seen this before... (Score:2)
Re:Seen this before... (Score:5, Interesting)
If you kick someone off, they'll find an alias and new IP and return for more attention. If they think they are just being ignored, they'll find somewhere else to play.
Re:Seen this before... (Score:5, Interesting)
This also sounds a bit like what a friend used to do in chat rooms on AOL. People would go there looking for some hot chat, and he would deliberately weird them out for fun. He would weird them out with conversation so bizarre, they were incredulous they had found such a nutcase. I found this hilarious to read as a third-party, and it probably did the target some good, as they will be forewarned about anonymous fiends on the other side of their chat.
Social manipulation is nothing new; this style of agitation once restricted to face-to-face interactions has become empowered in online social groups or forums.
Re:Seen this before... (Score:3, Interesting)
They're not empowered they're just an X-factor. In social settings people who agitate consistently are shunned from the group. Usually all it takes is someone to realise what that person is doing and then challenge them. That's Sociology 101. Betas quite often exhibit this behaviour just to get beat down by the Alpha.
I think the behaviour is
Re:Seen this before... (Score:4, Insightful)
Hate and Racism.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Hate and racism exists, has always existed, and will always exist.
As much as I hate racism, I don't think that trying to legislate people's beliefs is the answer.
Sure, don't let them act on their beliefs, but if they want to say things, why shouldn't they?
Re:Hate and Racism.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Hell, look at Slashdot. What if there weren't moderations, how many GNAA and Goatse ascii drawings wouldn't there be in every topic on the front page?
Re:Hate and Racism.... (Score:2)
Re:Hate and Racism.... (Score:2)
Re:Hate and Racism.... (Score:2)
To make an example to this point: Just look what a mess Usenet Groups targeted to eastern cultures are (soc.culture.japan is no longer about japanese culture, but about chinese hateing japanese, japanese hateing chinese and koreans, americans hateing them all, and of course everyone has to troll around).
Freedom of speech may be one of the integral principles of American heritage, but this certainly is FoS gone wrong.
Re:Hate and Racism.... (Score:2)
The article is stating that hate mongering groups are starting their own little clubs on google. They want to be flooded by inane and pointless racist remarks. Hasn't this mostly been the way of such groups? Exist in exclusive forms for a long time where the ugliness cannot be seen, and come out only when there is sufficient political power to destroy the object of ob
Re:Hate and Racism.... (Score:2)
I don't think that trying to legislate people's beliefs is the answer.
I agree with you, but where is anyone trying to legislate peoples beliefs? Brazil?
Re:Hate and Racism.... (Score:5, Insightful)
They want to piss people off and the quickest and most effective way is to post racial remarks.
Real racists...and belive me I grew up in a racist environment with Klan rallies going on about a mile from my house...are usually up front about their racism and shout it out non-anonymously.
Now, there are exceptions of course.
Re:Hate and Racism.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Just because you (along with the majority of people) think one thing doesn't mean that you should be able to silence the opinions of the minorities.
We as a people have been cruel, disrepectful, and promoting hatred for thousands of years...don't just think that everyone will suddenly change. Just because the majority has doesn't mean that everyone will.
What's next? Banning anything that doesn't agree w
freedom of speech and all that (Score:5, Interesting)
Now if they were to barge in on other forums and express those opinions, it could be considered harassment, and that really is a problem, and probably also illegal is your country, but as far as I know expressing unpleasant opinions in private is considered legal.
Re:freedom of speech and all that (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:freedom of speech and all that (Score:2)
Re:freedom of speech and all that (Score:3, Informative)
Furthermore, as was already pointed out, it's also a violation of the TOS, so even in cases where there's no crime being committed, people are still abusing the service.
Re:freedom of speech and all that (Score:2)
Re:freedom of speech and all that (Score:2)
Re:freedom of speech and all that (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:freedom of speech and all that (Score:2)
That being said... are you sure that saying that in the USSR under Stalin's regime, more people were killed than in the Holocaust (which I guess is what you mean) would be illegal in the Netherlands? I'm not from there myself, and IANAL, but based on what I know about legislation in other countries (such as Germany), I'd be surprised. In Germany, for example, at least from what I know, it's only illegal to promote the idea th
Re:So a US company has to abide by unfree speech? (Score:3, Insightful)
The other party who's telling people what to do is the Brazilian police (and, thus, the Brazilian government), and as long as they're regulating what Brazilian people are allowed to do, it certainly is within their rights to do so.
Same Article? (Score:2)
1st Amendment (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:1st Amendment (Score:3, Funny)
1. I admire your conviction
2. I agree with you totally
3. I hope you have medical insurance.
(unfortunately, in this case there is no *profit*)
I've wondered. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I've wondered. (Score:3, Insightful)
The majority that agreed with each other would soon eliminate the minority of opposing views. Soon each person would begin to express more and more of a biased perspective as they saw no opinions other than their own. Anyone with a divergent opinion that joined would soon either be acclimated into the overall group mind or be modded down until they stopped posting.
Soon the overall level of rhetoric in the forum would lead it participants to stage a bloody riot of canniba
identifying people to monitor (Score:3, Insightful)
they are identifying themselves to the world and to the intelligence services "come and get me, we're dumb enough to tell you who we are and dumb enough to _write down_ what we _really_ think".
Re:identifying people to monitor (Score:4, Insightful)
You're all for the prosecutions of thought crimes, I see.
I'm living in a country whose founding act was 56 people doing exactly what you're laughing at: listing exactly what they thought and putting their names on it, all but asking to be punished for the document. Part of what they believed in was that everybody had the same right to find happiness as the next guy, which means that holding an opinion, no matter how detestable, shouldn't be a crime and shouldn't be punished.
It would appear that you are not of the same belief.
Re:identifying people to monitor (Score:2)
did i say "to think is to commit a crime"?
no - what i implied was that there now exists a place where what people say is recorded - evidence that could be used if they ACTED or CAUSED people to act on what they are thinking.
thinking is fine. incitement to violence, racial hatred or other criminal acts is not fine.
Re:identifying people to monitor (Score:4, Insightful)
I applaud you, sir, for this wonderful bit of troll. This is what is called a "holier-than-thou" troll where the poster cleverly reveals that the other person's position can be twisted and misunderstood in a way that would make it the very opposite of motherhood, baseball, and apple pie. All right-thinking Americans ought to despise anyone who holds the other person's opinion.
Except of course the other side said nothing of the sort that you pretend they said. There's nothing about prosecution of thought crimes in there.
Re:Fucking stupid moderators! (Score:2)
monitor yes.
gather evidence yes.
prosecute based solely and exclusively on the basis of "words"? no.
_just_ in case they _might_ commit acts of "terrorism".
and in the UK they're passing laws that allow the government to do exactly the same...
Do You Have Stairs In Your House? (Score:3, Interesting)
1. It's free to browse the forums.
2. If you wanna post/reply - it'll cost you $10
3. Custom Titles & avatars -- another $10
4. If you make a "shit post" (among which blatant racism i.e. "post pictures of black people eating cliche' foods") or even single-word posts will automatically result in your message thread being "gassed" and your account being banned -- resulting in YOU having to pay another $10.
Re:Do You Have Stairs In Your House? (Score:4, Interesting)
It's like they're saying "come here and listen to all the people who paid us money. Your opinion doesn't matter until you do too."
NO one noticed they reside on /. ? (Score:4, Insightful)
"oh i saw them on blogs", "i saw them on site x, y and z"....
No ones noticed that we have this ALL the time on slashdot? How do we fix it? We leave a warning for all, and then we ignore it. Simple as pie.
The fact is racistism, and all *ism's will NEVER go away, but this doesn't mean that you can't choose to not care about them. These people have nothing better to do with their lifes, pity them, they are the ones that become nothing.
Slashdot, would be totally, totally ruined (far worse than people claim it is) if people took any notice of the trolls, but the whole fact that we DONT means they dont get anywhere.
People are racist in the streets, some people do it without even thinking about it, and would never do it if they realised they were. It happens, why can't humanity get over it?
Because humanity, wishes to be pefect, when people finally accept that we ARE a flawed race, then we might finally start bonding together.
Someone said "its from the cause of overpopulation". Nope, your wrong... Its from people creating value of other people. Its from people having something, someone else wants. No person really hated someone else for the colour of their skin, they hated them for some other reason, yet people are stupid and they look for hte easilest flaw to blame, which in most cases is the fact that someone has differently coloured skin.
I ware glasses, and people used to use this as a method of getting to me, it was actually the fact that i did damn well in school, even when i had only 50%~ attendance, and they were jelious. Yet the only way they could get at me, would be making jokes about my glasses. They couldn't cope when i made jokes about my glasses too, when i would turn around and use them as an aerial for the radio which wouldn't work. It would confuse them to have someone putting them selfs down.
Im not saying that anyone should go "Hey look, im black, i might as well set my self on fire" or anything stupid like this. This isn't the point, the point is there is many underlying issues, which causes this hatrid, most of the time, the person effected cannot change this either, as they mostly didn't cause the problem in the first place. So they have to look on and say "What can i do? Nothing.... so i ignore it".
it might anger them to see someone writing these things, but its not like they could ever change this person, so why waste time worrying about it. It wont change the world, it wont stop kids bullying others over stupid little things like this.
Ignore it, it might not go away, but at least then it wont effect you?
Re:NO one noticed they reside on /. ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Go read the comments of any outsouring story on Slashdot, and you'll find many racist comments moderated Insightful or Informative. It's a real disappointment that so many Slashdotters are nothing more than bigots.
"All what the good men have to do for Evil to triumf is to do nothing".
Re:NO one noticed they reside on /. ? (Score:2)
it was actually the fact that i did damn well in school, even when i had only 50%~ attendance, and they were jelious
You just might want to check your spelling, grammar, etc before you start talking about how smart you are.
it might anger them to see someone writing these things, but its not like they could ever change this person, so why waste time worrying about it. It wont change the world, it wont stop kids bullying others over stupid little things like this.
Google worries about it because they don
Re:NO one noticed they reside on /. ? (Score:2)
I know what you mean, and I d
Grammar hate (Score:2, Funny)
If you were so "good at school", why exactly is that you misspell:
Did you go to Yale and sit next to Dubya? Or are you simply trolling|karmawhoring?
The difference (Score:4, Interesting)
Although the model of Orkut depends on everyone being a real person (and an adult as well), release from jail seems to occur automatically even for fake accounts.
If you punish users for moderation rather than encourage it as /. does, and if you tolerate bogus identities in a social networking system (i.e. many miscreants don't get kicked out, as it does not really matter if they play by the same rules as everyone else), it becomes too easy for malicious participants to keep their hate speech visible on equal footing with honest, real people, while hiding behind forged profiles that are no better than anonymous avatars.
Actually, some apparent "fake users" have been allowed to exist for long enough on Orkut to see "fan" or "hate" communities being set up for "themselves".
In other words, on ./ and in real life (or even Usenet for that matter), the simple rule is this:
Whether you are using your true name or not, if you choose to be a troll, expect no better than to be treated as a troll.
On Orkut, everyone is expected to use their true identity and stand by their opinions, but because none of this is sufficiently well enforced, trolls have surprisingly little to fear.
There is no better way to undermine the moral standards in a community than allowing this to happen.
No broken glasses? (Score:4, Insightful)
Does happen and that is the problem with hate talk.
Surprised? (Score:5, Insightful)
Blogs give you the news you already agree with. IM has only your buddies. Cellphones let you walk around the world talking to people you already know, avoiding all new people. I could go on.
Cozy isn't it. Problem is, now noone has ANY need for real social skills, personality, or the ability to deal with different views.
Why in my day, we telnet'd into a BBS and met people from all over the world! "Chatrooms" (read: bot nests) only come in local and special interest these days.
At least here on Slashdot all us geeks are safe in our dupe friendly Microsoft unfriendly world
How about chalkboards and papyrus? (Score:2)
Bringing these people attention is the last thing I'd do. Bullys and hate-mongers? They don't deserve the attention. Leave them alone. Let them have their private discussions. The rest of the planet sees them for what they are.
Re:Surprised? (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeah, right. Back in those days, everybody that was on a BBS was a member of a small special interest group...the few with the tech savvy, money, free time, and geek desire to chat over a slow-ass modem.
Don't delude yourself into believing it the crowd was more diverse back then.
Re:Surprised? (Score:3, Funny)
The "problem"? (Score:3, Interesting)
And why is this not posted as the usual indignated rant under YRO, instead of this rehash of hysterical mainstream fear-mongering articles?
I'm not agreeing with eg. the IMO nutty racist Iranian gentleman mentioned in TFA, but that doesn't mean I want him to be banned from saying what he wants in his own online communities.
BTW, everyone is welcome to join the Flashback forums [flashback.info], no matter what OPINIONS you hold or wish to discuss. The English speaking forum could use more members too. (Ironically, I seem to have difficulties reaching the site at the moment, but I hope that's temporary. They've had problems with the Swedish authorities before.)
Re:The "problem"? (Score:3)
Regarding Orkut (Score:5, Insightful)
Hmm, it just feels like a community for people who wish to be "cool" to me, but regardless how I look at it, I always end up as seeing it as a useless idea?
Mixi.jp (Re:Regarding Orkut) (Score:5, Interesting)
Anyway, it seems to me like a successful version of what Orkut should be. I use it almost religiously and it works well because the majority of users are actually rather close to each other (few hours by train at the most in most cases) so we can actually meet in real life. My list of friends is a little small (32 at the moment) but I have met all but 3 of those people IRL. Of those three, one lives in the US, one lives in Hokkkaido (I'm in Tokyo) and the other...well, timing just hasn't worked out yet.
Anyway, the point of my post is that in some cases, these "small randomly put together communities" work quite well and can be an excellent supplement to IRL (note: I did NOT say replacement). I've gotten some good snowboarding buddies, some good music buddies, some good photography buddies, etc. Hell, I even met a really attractive girl that will hopefully be my next girlfriend (2 months without getting any is starting to drive me crazy...broke up last december ;_; )
So, these sites can work. I think Orkut's problem is that it is just too big and unfocused.
Re:Mixi.jp (Re:Regarding Orkut) (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, that's what I thought too. I can certainly see the point of a community like the one you're member of, since you can both meet each other and has a system so you're more willing to leave out sensitive private details that can't be read by any freak in the world.
I hope google has learnt ... (Score:2)
"Thou shalt not close the community at the expense of diversity of opinion".
I'm not sure why it took them so long to work this one out. Just goes to show that there's nothing common about common sense.
An insider's view (Score:5, Insightful)
http://media.orkut.com/articles/0100.html [orkut.com]
Is this news? (Score:2, Insightful)
People are missing the point (Score:5, Interesting)
These groups are formed and peopled by people who share an extremist viewpoint. In normal society, extremists are moderated by contact with people who aren't extremists. In a society like Orkut, extremists come into contact with more and more people who share the same view. This could potentially cause them to become even more extreme in their views or even spur them to action.
This is the problem. It's not really about free speech and censorship; it's about what happens when you have a social system which encourages extremism, instead of one which works to moderate behaviour.
Re: People are missing the point (Score:2, Interesting)
This could potentially cause them to become even more extreme in their views or even spur them to action.
Until such action actually takes place, there is no justification for censorship. If we retaliate against potential threats, where does it end?
I think it is much more reasonable to let this take its natural course and if objectionable actions do take place we can punish the offenders.
One man's extremism... (Score:4, Insightful)
Look at the history of interference with peacable assembly for a clue as to why the Founders put this clause as the first of the rights they considered most likely for the government to usurp from the people.
Yes you read that right... the Bill of Rights is not an enumeration of the rights guaranteed to the people by the government -- but an enumeration of the rights that the people possess by "the laws of nature and nature's god" in the order most likely to be usruped by government.
Moreover, what this means is that the Bill of Rights is a declaration of natural rights meaning that if any government violates them that government cannot be considered consistent with the laws of nature.
This is an "extremist" stand. Indeed, any stand of integrity means adhering to the principles stated in the face even of death. That is the essence of "extremism". Can you think why powerful people might consider any integrity exhibited by those without power as "extremist" and seek to have "extremism" suppressed through social, cultural, legal, economic, police and any other means necessary?
Indeed, when weaseling courts mockingly refer to "the penumbra of the Constitution [google.com]" what they are in fact saying is that the government is like the light of the Sun itself and the people's rights are like the shadow of the moon on the earth during a total eclipse of the sun -- absolute only at a single point.
Well, if there is a single point to the Constitution, it is reflected in the first paragraph of the document forming the foundation for the creation of the Constitution:
It is clearly stated:
The whole point of freedom, the single point made by the whole of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and the original Bill of Rights, is recognition of the primordial freedom to choose those with whom one will associate.
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
The concept of orkut draws facism (Score:3, Insightful)
I personally react extremely allergic to stuff like that, due to personal experiences with latent synthetic elitism in the past. Weak personalities (which racists and facists usually are) much easier see orkut as their chance to feel special for no true reason whatsoever.
Bottom line:
Orkuts basic concept actually is an emotional and spiritual groundwork for facisim and thus flawed. Google would be best of shutting it down or dropping the concept of 'invitation only'.
Welcome back to the BBS era (Score:2, Informative)
There is always a few clowns who like to post crap - they get real tough safe in their rooms. I call it 'modem machismo'.
The way to handle this is to hammer the offensive message immediately. No need to kick the guy, unless he is incorrigible.
Works for flame wars too. (Which must be discouraged immediately)
It's a little like being the bouncer in a bar. How long do you think the bouncer would tolerate a punch up?
Some things I know about moderating conversations (Score:4, Informative)
Some things I know about moderating conversations in virtual space [nielsenhayden.com] .
Suggestions include:
The rest of the list [nielsenhayden.com] is also quite good, including a comment onThese People are Mostly Thick (Score:3, Insightful)
You know, I'm more worried about the rise of organized groups, such as the German NPD [npd.de] or the Russian democratic party. Gentlemen such as Mr. Poursaleh somehow, deep down, seem to missing a somewhat fundamental point about how the people whose policies he's advocating might view his own particular ethnic group.
Crackpot pseudoscientific about racial biology and what defines "aryan", as a sometime student of history I'm not aware of Mr. Hilter & his merry gang of pirates ever planning to set up an division of Persian SS stormtroopers...
Keep in mind (Score:4, Insightful)
I worry that this recent witch hunt trend against racist movements will supercede the country's recognition of the Constitution.
These people have a right to their thoughts and ideas as long as they aren't harming others, killing, assaulting, etc.
If you want to properly combat these people, you are going to have to listen to their concerns. I believe that they have legitimate concerns that are skewed by blanket ideology and a fascination with nazism and ephemera. Shunning them only makes them stronger.
Diversity counselors are well-versed in this, as they're always lecturing us about this shit, but seem unwilling when the tables are turned.
Shouldn't this be a "Your Rights Online" post?
Also in the New York Times Feb 7th (Score:4, Informative)
Is anyone still using Orkut? (Score:3, Insightful)
Why people are using this service and not some of the alternatives, I have no idea. Were I google, I'd jettison it quickly before it more seriously erodes my brand.
Re:As a member of one of those "hatred" communitie (Score:3, Insightful)
And so it's OK for Muslims, who don't view Jesus as a Messiah, to be antisemetic? Nice logic: by it, you're allowed to hate people you're not forced to relate with.
"Gays, on the other hand, have free will and they do what they choose to do."
It's really simple: if one could choose one's sexual orientation, then a heterosexual man could choose to be gay. Since you're the one making the assertion, I have to ask you: Have you ever tried
Re:As a member of one of those "hatred" communitie (Score:3, Informative)
Alright - screw my karma - I'm disgusted by the sheer level of anti-religious groupthink that occurs on this web site, and also by the tactics that are used to suppress religious views.
"OK, hatred for Jews is stupid (after all, even Jesus was a Jew)"
And so it's OK for Muslims, who don't view Jesus as a Messiah, to be antisemetic? Nice logic: by it, you're allowed to hate people you're not forced to relate with.
Hey I have a great idea - how about arguing against what he said and not words you deci
bullshit (Score:3, Insightful)
its pseudo-religious FUD.
Re:The End Of Political Correctness (Score:2)
There is something in the parent post that is making me nervous.
What the hell could that be?
Re:Racisms will end (Score:2)
People will find some characteristic other than race to single out and harass people. E.g. they'll single out fat people, or skinny people, or smart people, or whatever. They already do, just look at a classroom, even if everyone in the class is all white.
Have you ever noticed though that the people who do this, i.e. harass other people based on some arbitrary characteristic, are invariably useless people .. i.e. they are usually people who have nothing special about them, no special skills, and are not ab
What the .. ? Resubmitting (Score:3, Insightful)
What the hell, I edited the mistakes in that post on a preview, resubmitted, and it posted the OLD VERSION with the mistakes in it?!? Dammit. Here we go again:
People will find some characteristic other than race to single out and harass people. E.g. they'll single out fat people, or skinny people, or smart people, or whatever. They already do, just look at any classroom in which everyone is white.
Have you ever noticed though that the people who do this, i.e. harass other people based on some arbitrary c