So I was thinking about jerks on the internet. You know the ones I mean.
This lead me to thinking about how some places seem to be worse than others. youtube seems to attract a lot of stupid, but escapists are usually well-behaved. I'm sure we can all point to games that have better or worse communities than others. It even goes so far that on specific forums, you can point to sections that are more likely to devolve into hostility than others. RSI is a good example of this; subscribers tend to avoid the general chat section because people are just so much more friendlier in the subscriber's den.
But these people can't be full-time jerkwads, right? They must have families and friends and be at least moderately agreeable in their day-to-day lives...
And then I realized that there are real-life situations that mirror this. Different places have different rules of behaviour attached to them. Don't shout in a library, don't use your cellphone in a theatre, you get the idea. some have signs, (no smoking, for example) but in other cases the rules are unwritten. You don't bust out your dancemoves while shopping for groceries, even though the store has no specific anti-dancing policy. You just behave the way you are expected to in the place you're visiting.
Do you think this might be an explanation for behaviour on the web? people behave in a certain way on certain websites because that's just how you behave there?
and, if this is true, could we use that knowledge to influence people's behaviour in order to make websites nicer places to be?
This lead me to thinking about how some places seem to be worse than others. youtube seems to attract a lot of stupid, but escapists are usually well-behaved. I'm sure we can all point to games that have better or worse communities than others. It even goes so far that on specific forums, you can point to sections that are more likely to devolve into hostility than others. RSI is a good example of this; subscribers tend to avoid the general chat section because people are just so much more friendlier in the subscriber's den.
But these people can't be full-time jerkwads, right? They must have families and friends and be at least moderately agreeable in their day-to-day lives...
And then I realized that there are real-life situations that mirror this. Different places have different rules of behaviour attached to them. Don't shout in a library, don't use your cellphone in a theatre, you get the idea. some have signs, (no smoking, for example) but in other cases the rules are unwritten. You don't bust out your dancemoves while shopping for groceries, even though the store has no specific anti-dancing policy. You just behave the way you are expected to in the place you're visiting.
Do you think this might be an explanation for behaviour on the web? people behave in a certain way on certain websites because that's just how you behave there?
and, if this is true, could we use that knowledge to influence people's behaviour in order to make websites nicer places to be?