As the discussion generating this thread, and this thread itself, have played out, I have been impressed.
I am surprised by some of the contributors and the sense of a general disdain for punitive measures taken by some Internet message boards. There seems to be an acknowledgement that excessive punitive measures can, in fact, happen.
Maybe I am reading that wrong, as I have not obsessed on every word that has been said, but I sense from the discussion that valued and respected contributors are no longer allowed to contribute on some sites, and that seems to be a surprise and disappointment to some who knew and respected them.
I believe that the freedom to discuss actions taken on one site can be an appropriate topic on other sites, in that those discussions serves as a means of keeping those actions in check. It seems inconsistent that a site that has been intolerant of discussions about them on other sites, appears to be tolerant of a discussion about another site on their site.
Perhaps recent discussions on this site have prompted more tolerance on that site.
Anyone follow that?
In light of current Internet law, there is little else to restrict possible abusive treatment of users of Internet sites, other than the way other users view that treatment. And the only way I can think of to reveal that is to allow a discussion of that somewhere.
The key is to find a way of keeping those discussions themselves in check and to not obsess with them.
I believe a way to do that can be found.
I also hope that those who do not appreciate those discussions, do appreciate the fact that those who have engaged in them on this site have voluntarily curtailed them until this issue can be resolved, and to respect their desire to engage in some form of freedom of speech.
I acknowledge that this is a sensitive issue, and I respect the difficulty that site manangers and owners have with it. It is something that the Internet has to find a way to deal with, or those who, in their infinite wisdom, decide things we cannot decide for ourselves, will.
It is an issue that is bigger than any of us.
I am surprised by some of the contributors and the sense of a general disdain for punitive measures taken by some Internet message boards. There seems to be an acknowledgement that excessive punitive measures can, in fact, happen.
Maybe I am reading that wrong, as I have not obsessed on every word that has been said, but I sense from the discussion that valued and respected contributors are no longer allowed to contribute on some sites, and that seems to be a surprise and disappointment to some who knew and respected them.
I believe that the freedom to discuss actions taken on one site can be an appropriate topic on other sites, in that those discussions serves as a means of keeping those actions in check. It seems inconsistent that a site that has been intolerant of discussions about them on other sites, appears to be tolerant of a discussion about another site on their site.
Perhaps recent discussions on this site have prompted more tolerance on that site.
Anyone follow that?
In light of current Internet law, there is little else to restrict possible abusive treatment of users of Internet sites, other than the way other users view that treatment. And the only way I can think of to reveal that is to allow a discussion of that somewhere.
The key is to find a way of keeping those discussions themselves in check and to not obsess with them.
I believe a way to do that can be found.
I also hope that those who do not appreciate those discussions, do appreciate the fact that those who have engaged in them on this site have voluntarily curtailed them until this issue can be resolved, and to respect their desire to engage in some form of freedom of speech.
I acknowledge that this is a sensitive issue, and I respect the difficulty that site manangers and owners have with it. It is something that the Internet has to find a way to deal with, or those who, in their infinite wisdom, decide things we cannot decide for ourselves, will.
It is an issue that is bigger than any of us.
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