Semiautodidactic said:
Self defeating attitudes like this one are kind of the exact reason online harassment is so prevalent in our current climate. When you deflect responsibility and say that there's nothing to be done, you enable and encourage harassers to continue ruining the community for everyone else.
This is almost word-for-word what people say when someone criticizes the inherently illogical and irrational "men can stop rape" initiative I referenced in my post - and I'm exactly as confused by it. In fact, it's really almost worse in this situation because people are advocating for solutions that actually encourage, embolden, and strengthen the offenders.
Is it self-defeating to embrace the only viable path to victory/mitigation?
Is it a deflection of responsibility when people point out that your ideas will only make things worse?
Is a community ruined if a small handful of terrible people take advantage of free and open spaces to harass and abuse others?
Based on the ridiculous fights that break out in practically every comment section on the internet, which community isn't ruined?
Here's an interesting article on the subject: http://www.wired.com/2014/05/fighting-online-harassment/
"To truly shift social norms, the community, by definition, has to get involved in enforcing them. This could mean making comments of disapproval, upvoting and downvoting, or simply reporting bad behavior."
People already report bad behavior. People already upvote/downvote and make disapproving comments. These practices don't shame horribly offensive people *because horribly offensive people have no shame*. If they did, they wouldn't do what they do.
You can't defeat a person seeking your attention at literally any cost by giving them attention. Flavoring your reaction, shading it one way or the other, cannot alter this fundamental truth. You marginalize and defeat such a person by either taking away their platform or ignoring them. In some spaces, it is appropriate to snag the microphone. In other spaces, you have to live with the idiocy. No matter what happens, these people will *never vanish entirely*. There is no "final solution" or "banding together to take out the trash". They will find another platform, create another space. That's the beauty and tragedy of the internet. Full stop.
The best online forums are the ones that take seriously their role as communities, including the famously civil MetaFilter, whose moderation is guided by a ?don?t be an asshole? principle. On a much larger scale, Microsoft?s Xbox network implemented a community-powered reputation system for its new Xbox One console. Using feedback from players, as well as a variety of other metrics, the system determines whether a user gets rated green (?Good Player?), yellow (?Needs Improvement?), or red (?Avoid Me?).
Excellent examples of safe spaces - or at least spaces attempting to be more safe. There still exist unsafe, un-moderated, free-and-open spaces, however, and they will always exist. Nothing you or I can do, short of implementing a draconian police state, can sweep these offensive people away.
As a community we need to be more proactive about policing bad behavior, and until we are we won't be able to carry on any important discussions without being drowned out by vitriol.
Maybe important discussions don't belong on twitter or in comments sections. Maybe important discussions should be reserved for more controlled environments, and the uncontrolled spaces can remain a chaotic torrent of totally free expression - a torrent we occasionally call upon to overwhelm and wash away the sheltered places when ideas or people become too entrenched and cozy.
One thing you shouldn't do: conflate stray offensive strands of the wild internet abyss with your legitimate intellectual opponents.
Anyways, what's the actual plan here? Make everyone use their real name? Behold, Internet 2.0. Ban people from twitter? What's this?! A twitter substitute gaining steam almost immediately. Kick the twerps out of your forum, off your website, from your blog host? A new forum, a new website, a new blog host, all catering to a demand in the name of making a buck.
At this point I'm trying to figure out if people are a) being unintentionally obtuse about the way this stuff works or b) being willfully ignorant because they've got stock in the online media companies that rely on clickbaiting and infighting to turn profit.