Ginseng Posted October 26, 2013 Posted October 26, 2013 Came across this rather interesting long form article in the New Yorker. The Psychology of Online Comments I found it to be illuminating with respect to some of the incivility we've all seen, experienced, and perhaps engaged in while online. Wilkey
khomeinist Posted October 26, 2013 Posted October 26, 2013 Mildly interesting. Covers trolling fairly thoroughly but what about group-think and synchophancy? The subtler forms of human interaction on the Internet require further exploration.
Ginseng Posted October 26, 2013 Author Posted October 26, 2013 There are many dimensions and phenomena here as you have noted. By all means, edify us. Preferably with shorter digests than what I linked because that was substantial by online forum link standards. Wilkey
Trevor2118 Posted October 26, 2013 Posted October 26, 2013 I liked the line: "On (Gawker), in the process of voting a comment up or down, users can set the tone of the comments, creating a surprisingly civil result." Basically member moderation.
khomeinist Posted October 26, 2013 Posted October 26, 2013 Actually Gawker sites are a bit different than standard (utopian?) user moderation. Comments are essentially threaded and promoted according to overall response. This rewards interesting comments or debate points but can also promote a culture of 'cute' puns and other forms of 'hilarity' (gifs, memes, etc). I like Gawker sites generally but they can be awfully snarky. Not that there is anything wrong with that.
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