I'll be in my bunk.

Jayne ,'War Stories'


Bureaucracy 1: Like Kafka, Only Funnier  

A thread to discuss naming threads, board policy, new thread suggestions, and anything else that has to do with board administration and maintenance. Guaranteed to include lively debate and polls. Natter discouraged, but not deleted.

Current Stompy Feet: ita, Jon B, DXMachina, P.M. Marcontell, Liese S., amych


Katie M - Mar 19, 2003 12:05:27 pm PST #8084 of 10001
I was charmed (albeit somewhat perplexed) by the fannish sensibility of many of the music choices -- it's like the director was trying to vid Canada. --loligo on the Olympic Opening Ceremonies

Yes, Jesse. I agree.

Yeah, so do I - I just wanted to get the infrastructure for moving it to formal discussion set up before we got sidetracked.

Is Mr. Pointy up anywhere? I've forgotten where it went. Though I suppose we could go with "I Guess We Should Have Voted" per ita's suggestion. (Assuming that you meant that quote and not the capitalism thingie.)


brenda m - Mar 19, 2003 12:05:40 pm PST #8085 of 10001
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

Yeah, I don't think we're at the proposal stage yet.

Thinking out loud:

I could see making official stompy warnings a little easier, but allowing more of them before it came to suspension. If two warnings were allowed before things went to a next stage, the stompies might feel a little freer to issue them (and maybe we'd want a two-stompy agreement so that one person didn't feel so isolated in taking action.) A second warning could take the form of "we've asked you about this before - you're not listening. Please hie yourself to bureaucracy to discuss the matter before further action is needed." Then if the poster either refused to discuss or was still recalcitrant in the discussion, suspension would be the next step.


bitterchick - Mar 19, 2003 12:06:22 pm PST #8086 of 10001

Okay, I'll bite. I propose that we discuss an official policy regarding problem posters. Specifically:

  • What behavior do we consider deserving of a warning?

  • What constitutes a warning?

  • How do we notify party of said warning?

  • How much time do we give a warned poster before moving onto the suspension phase?

  • How do we handle a poster that has been warned but feels it unfair or unjustified? Is there an appeals procedure?


Cindy - Mar 19, 2003 12:07:31 pm PST #8087 of 10001
Nobody

Allyson,

I didn't mention the board or the fandom. You said you wanted TWoP moderation here, but the fact is we can't (or won't) block offenders, because we're afraid of blocking non-offenders. Maybe it's possible to block one and not the other.


Allyson - Mar 19, 2003 12:09:01 pm PST #8088 of 10001
Wait, is this real-world child support, where the money goes to buy food for the kids, or MRA fantasyland child support where the women just buy Ferraris and cocaine? -Jessica

I dont give a shit, Cindy. The idea of contacting them about this board squicks me so hardcore, that I feel physically ill.


bitterchick - Mar 19, 2003 12:09:32 pm PST #8089 of 10001

Allyson is me.


Anne W. - Mar 19, 2003 12:13:27 pm PST #8090 of 10001
The lost sheep grow teeth, forsake their lambs, and lie with the lions.

Dammit! I had a whole procedure for the warn-suspend-ban thing that was eloquent, well-thought-out, and that allowed for a nice balance of warm, fuzzy discussion, and cold, hard procedure.

Then my computer ate my post. I feel like poor Fenchurch at the beginning of HHGttG.

Anyway, here's a summary of what I said in the missing post.

1. If a person is being trollish, that person should probably be corrected/Doblerized right then-and-there by the offended party. If the troll then continues to be trollish (either by continuing the offending behavior, or ripping into the person who corrected him/her), the offended party would then say, "We need to discuss this. Please meet us in Bureaucracy." The offended party would then go immediately to Bureaucracy and Nilly the offending post(s) and say that they'd invited the person to discuss. That way, we could discuss the behavior, along with what--if anything--was wrong with it.

With any luck, one or two such occurrences would clue in people who were well-meaning, but not familiar with our culture.

2. Assume the person is just a mean-spirited twit, and keeps on offending. At this point, we should probably model the process on the whole "second the motion four times, then vote." Four subsequent referrals to Bureaucracy by four different individuals would automatically generate the dreaded "official warning." By having it automatic and form-letter like, I think it would seem less like a personal attack. The O.W. would be posted in the thread(s) that generated the offending posts, Bureauracy, maybe Press or Beep Me, and would also be sent to the person's profile address.

3. After the O.W., the next referral to Bureaucracy would mean a suspension. By this point, if the person has been Doblerized several times, invited to formally discuss his/her behavior several times, etc., it's clear that he/she has little or no interest in changing his/her behavior.

4. Banning would occur if the person comes back during the two month suspension. After the two month suspension, the person would come back with a semi-clean slate. If they started acting up again, the whole procedure would start from the beginning, except this time, suspension would be replaced with banishment.

I'd like to toss this idea out there for discussion. There may be problems with it that I'm not seeing, but I think that it allows for things to be handled in a reasonably friendly, casual manner while still allowing us reassurance that we do have recourse if a person is making us feel unsafe in our own cyber-home.


Jessica - Mar 19, 2003 12:16:10 pm PST #8091 of 10001
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

but the fact is we can't (or won't) block offenders, because we're afraid of blocking non-offenders.

Cindy, I think the bigger problem is that since most IP addresses are dynamic, blocking them doesn't do much good. Most dial-up (and even most DSL) accounts assign you a new IP address every time you sign on.


Jess M. - Mar 19, 2003 12:17:45 pm PST #8092 of 10001
Let me just say that popularity with people on public transportation does not equal literary respect. --Jesse

late to the party, but can I get an explanation of Doblerize?


DavidS - Mar 19, 2003 12:18:48 pm PST #8093 of 10001
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

What behavior do we consider deserving of a warning?

Let's use our real life example. Being personally insulting, being unresponsive to community members asking to adjust tone, or continuing to use a purposefully abrasive tone that sets off more than one person. What happened with mieskie is that a number of people complained about it her in Bureaucracy, enough (whatever that number was - I remember about 8 or 9 people chiming in) that a Stompy posted a warning in the thread identified as an official stompy warning.

What constitutes a warning?

How do we notify party of said warning?

I think a official notice from a Stompy both in the thread where it happened (we talked about making it formatted differently so it would stand out) and through email.

How much time do we give a warned poster before moving onto the suspension phase?

We didn't handle this very well with mieskie. Also as a newcomer he didn't really know/understand Bureaucracy at first. We should allow some recourse to defend or appeal. This was not a popular notion at first because folks had encountered Trolls who derailed admin threads by using this door.

How do we handle a poster that has been warned but feels it unfair or unjustified? Is there an appeals procedure?

We had discussed (in lieu of letting the warned person make their case in Bureaucracy) letting them make a direct email appeal to the Stompys which could be posted here, and allow people to discuss it without letting a troll dominate the board with debate about their behavior.