qwints
Muse
- Joined
- Sep 2, 2008
- Messages
- 697
Let them come over here and engage in debate.
Hi, have you met ApostateltsopA and myself?
Let them come over here and engage in debate.
Hi, have you met ApostateltsopA and myself?
Wow, that's a pretty disturbing hypothetical plan you've got.
Hey, I'm a regular poster over at the atheismplus forums. Haven't posted on here for quite a long time, but I thought I might serve as another person for you to talk to rather than have y'all continue kibitzing on our forum.
A brief summary of my thoughts on this thread so far:
There are lots of spaces for more or less open debate online, including several large ones specifically catering to skeptics and/or atheists. The existence of a space with different goals is not a threat to those spaces.
No one is immune to criticism. People, including moderators, have said things they've regretted saying or that they should regret saying. You're well within your rights to criticize them (or me) for that. They have no duty to explain their actions to you when you do so.
I'm willing to accept some limitations and obligations in my participation on that forum to increase that forums accessibility to others - even when I don't understand the need for those limitations - because the cost is generally so low.
Diagnosing the mental health of forum members based solely on their posts is both laughable and contemptible.
Please stop trying to further victimize Kochanski with false claims.
Some of the results there are interesting. Only slightly more people consider lesbians to be less privileged than bisexuals, and apparently Atheists are more privileged than Hindus.
I think it is pretty stupid. Perhaps that is the point, I don't know. However when 20% of the respondents think someone earning minimum wage is less privileged than someone who is incarcerated in prison, I have a hard time thinking anyone really understand what the hell they are measuring.
Privilege as a quantifiable attribute that determines someone's moral superiority is unworkable. Privilege as a sociological framework for examining differences in experience is useful.
Privilege as a quantifiable attribute that determines someone's moral superiority is unworkable. Privilege as a sociological framework for examining differences in experience is useful.
No, it's really not. "Privilege" is a horrible meme and it needs to die...
I think you are confused.
I did not say anything they have done is abuse, I say the people on the blockbot list are now victims of slander. Not because they were added to the list but because of the BBC news program.
I say that I have been added on blockbot as level 2 with no indication why I was put there and at that level and at whose instigation. I say that the levels are arbitrarily decided by a group of individuals using a criteria that is not explained anywhere. I say that they participated in BBC news program speaking about the blockbot with twitter handles shown on screen and individuals on that blockbot list are referred to as abusers. And I say that this is slander and can cause harm in that people who have seen the show and may go to see the blockbot list with the limited information they were given watching the show will see those individuals as abusers.
I have no objection to them creating a blockbot for their own use and as long as it does not violate Twitters TOS they can do as they please.
If anyone equates criticism as abuse it is the individuals who objected enough to people's tweet to feel the need to create a blockbot so that they would not have to see criticism or disagreement with their views.
Blocking someone is not criticism, criticism requires engagement and they have not engaged with me at all. They did not tell me I was added, or why or at whose instigation. They chose to disengage completely.
I am perfectly willing to engage in discussions with any of them if they wish and if they have a problem with anything I have said I will accept the criticism. If I feel they have valid criticisms I may apologize for my words.
This week is banned book week, a good time to reflect on censorship and such.
What do you think is the error rate of the blockbot?
Whatever rate the users and admins accept. No one needs anyone's permission to block someone on twitter, all the block bot does is keep a list and automate blocking.What do you think is a reasonable error rate for such a bot?
What do you think is the amount of resources (time, energy, expertise, spoons, etc.) necessary to achieve a reasonable error rate for such a bot?
Do you think that such a bot should be implemented, if the necessary resources aren't available to maintain a reasonable error rate?
What's the current bot maintainer's attitude towards errors?
What process does the maintainer follow to avoid errors?
What process does the maintainer follow to correct errors?
Yes, but admittedly gaining transparency from less transparency in the past, as well as they need to be and yes. The bot is open source code, anyone can use one. It is no different ethically than the block feature which is also standard on social media interfaces.Is the process transparent? Are the criteria well-defined? Do you think such a bot should be implemented without these things?
It's not a question of perfection or nothing. It's a question of making a serious, good-faith effort to do it well, to listen to criticism, and to make improvements. Nobody is saying the blockbot has to be perfect; they're saying it needs to stop being so badly and gratuitously wrong.
I'm not sure how you got that out of Kochanski's post. There's a world of difference between mild criticism on an Internet forum and publicly labeling people as abusers. Surely, you can see that.
Let them come over here and engage in debate. Stepping out of the safe zone might be good for them. I promise not to use my mod powers to interfere in any way. I'll even recuse myself from modding any A+er who comes here, just to avoid even the appearance of bias.
I doubt they will, but the door's always open.
Please stop trying to further victimize Kochanski with false claims.
Respectfully,
Myriad
Sorry...I can't understand whether or not you're making a joke here or if that is what you consider a serious argument. Care to clarify?
It was a direct, and honest, presentation of my understanding of his statements. I'm still waiting to see how this thread is substantially different from an organized blocking tool on twitter as a comparison of harm. Quite frankly participation in one while rejecting the other seems like hypocrisy to me.
Don't say "Censorship" that is also false. No one is being prevented from saying anything on the medium of Twitter, or any other. Some people are simply refusing to listen to what others are saying.
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It was a direct response to the criticism...