on 21-02-2014 09:24 AM
Although I participate in social media on various sites I find the online snitches to be far more virulent re reporting certain posters.
Also the 3rd party boycotts of businesses by the Greens, Crikey, Get up and unions is far more serious than first thought when they started to ruin businesses.
We are also shut down for not showing enough sympathy for people who lose their lives doing things that lead to that very fact & playing the race and redneck card is a particular favourite.
The stifling of opinions by calling to arms their adherents to remove people is a 21st century thing, more people who don't have the education to make an educated comment have access to social media.
The article below should be an eye opener to some but I'm not holding out any hope that they will pull back from this type of activity:
What sort of person posts tasteless things online and what trolling may reveal about society at large.
There is another question that has gone unasked: what type of person grasses on people for saying things they find offensive about people they don’t even know?
The online snitch is not the antidote to the online troll; he is the flipside, indeed, online snitches pursue their targets with the same unflinching obsession as online trolls.
Online snitches repost offending comments and encourage others to share, submit and express their outrage, some even campaign to make the troll ‘famous’ for being offensive.
Like the trolls, snitches express the same egotism and desire for attention and validation, only they want to be validated for their pious outrage rather than their ability to comment & push buttons.
This has a profound negative impact, not least for those people directly affected by trolling. Indeed, if online snitches actually cared about those targeted by online trolling, they should ignore such trolling. Instead, the actions of such people increase the exposure of offensive online posts.
By engaging with trolls and, in many cases, reporting them to the police, snitches turn small, often unnoticed incidents of trolling into full-blown media stories, making it much more likely that those affected by trolling will become aware of the offensive posts.
However, a more worrisome development is the impact the online snitches are having on how speech is policed online.
The online troll and the online snitch are not wholly different creatures: they come from the same swamp. The difference is that trolls don’t actually matter; their attention-seeking outbursts have no meaning outside of the online world.
Trolls
There are a whole bunch of theories about dealing with trolls. The most well-known being that you shouldn't feed the trolls.
It all boils down to this: every so often you have to dispatch a troll.
The snitch, however, has a far greater and more dangerous impact.
In their sanctioning of intervention into speech, online snitches are facilitating the erosion of freedom of speech – and cheering it all the way.
Rob Harries is a writer and researcher based in London.
on 21-02-2014 06:25 PM
Thank you for your concern. I think robust debate is a good thing if the topic is being addressed.
Musings are not hostile either and a bit of leeway can only be looked upon as just that but your concern is appreciated.
on 21-02-2014 06:25 PM
on 21-02-2014 06:33 PM
@silverfaun wrote:Getting back to playing the topic not the poster I'm sure you are all aware of the viscious fight that went on with 2 well known posters that ended up on the internet for all to see. The cowardly rounding up of followers to "let the baiting begin" incitement.
This type of activity is appalling, it's out there forever, just google it, it can never be erased, not something that any of you I'm sure, would want to be a part of.
2 well known posters from where? Are you talking about this forum or some other forum or social media site?
on 21-02-2014 06:34 PM
on 21-02-2014 06:35 PM
on 21-02-2014 06:37 PM
Not locked but a warning it could be.
Just a thought! what is your collective opinion on this type of thing? Do you find that its a thread killer or does it do some good re behaviour modification?
on 21-02-2014 06:39 PM
@love*today wrote:
lol a thread being locked...*scrolls up to see what ID derailed it......
just did a quick scroll of the thread, and i reckon that ID had some catching up to do by the looks
on 21-02-2014 06:39 PM
@silverfaun wrote:I missed your post too. Maybe the person who thinks I am you and posted a hello to you when you hadn’t as yet come on here has a teeny little prob? Who knows.
The greeting was posted after Soul posted a comment.
21-02-2014 06:41 PM - edited 21-02-2014 06:44 PM
on 21-02-2014 06:41 PM
I am not going to name names or the twitter accounts of the aforementioned but I’m sure many know all about it. Its on the net.