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On the sickness of our community

On the sickness of our community

Posted Oct 10, 2014 4:32 UTC (Fri) by samth (guest, #1290)
In reply to: On the sickness of our community by raven667
Parent article: On the sickness of our community

I used to be the sort of person who enjoyed flaming people on the internet -- it can be both cathartic and fun. But it's not a good thing to do, and it actively excludes people from our communities. So I don't do it anymore. People can change their behavior.


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On the sickness of our community

Posted Oct 10, 2014 8:51 UTC (Fri) by tao (subscriber, #17563) [Link] (2 responses)

I love writing flames, but I (almost) never post them. It's rather cathartic.

Whenever I see something I find really stupid, I write a long rant about it, then proof-read it, then finally discard my reply.

After that I write (or not, depending on whether I have any input that actually hasn't been repeated 100x already) my real reply and submit that instead.

Works surprisingly well.

Imagine how much calmer mailing list discussion and online forums would be if there was a "Please wait 5 minutes, re-read your post (and the post you reply to), wait 5 minutes more to have the send button activate" policy...

On the sickness of our community

Posted Oct 10, 2014 18:30 UTC (Fri) by k8to (guest, #15413) [Link]

I tend to find those "wait to send your reply" controls make me annoyed, and if already annoyed make me more annoyed. So I suspect the results would be mixed.

On the sickness of our community

Posted Oct 11, 2014 5:26 UTC (Sat) by apoelstra (subscriber, #75205) [Link]

I do this too. Even LWN's "Preview Comment" requirement with no timer at all is sufficient for me to reconsider what I wrote. Probably 90% of my posts here I decide aren't sufficiently original or non-obvious (or polite :P) to be worth sending.

And I always wonder whether the editors can see posts that were previewed but not posted..


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