![]() |
you need to be able to ban people. what if they start spewing your personal info, or making threats, or posting illegal images (kiddie p*rn) etc.
you can ignore someone to an extent, unless the rest of the people on your board like them, and talk to them....... i tried to ignore marichiko for a while, but the rest of us are not as strong as i am in my distaste, so they talk to her, and i follow the conversation sometimes. now, if she's talking to someone else lame, i can tune it out pretty effectively. i would not vote to ban marichiko. i would, and have voted to chase her away, though. it only took for about 2 months, but it was fun at the time. for some reason, she gets off on me bashing her. true attention whores dont care if the attention is pos or neg, i guess. |
Quote:
Answers to all these sorts of questions follow the Cellar culture. Members are expected to act like grown-ups and exhibit some self-control. UT takes care of the very few folks who can't manage that. On another topic, have you noticed, Steve, how many of your threads are meta-posts (posts about the Cellar, the Dwellars, comparisons with AG etc.)? I think your other threads are more interesting. |
Based on my observations, banning is used most commonly here on spammers - because no one likes them. Occasionally a ban-worthy troll visits us. Jochser sums it up well "He really is just pure troll. I haven't seen any other side to him, except just trying to annoy and put down people."
I don't use the ignore feature, I don't have the willpower I guess. Even if I find <strike>mari</strike> someones posts completely worthless, the blank spots left where their posts should be, and the replies that don't make sense because I've missed something, bug me. |
damn. you're so much more subtle than i am.
|
Quote:
:lol: |
From 1990-1999 I think we banned like one person. The system worked well at the time because it took a little more effort to get on and participate.
In recent times the number has jumped to like 50 bans in the last six months. Did I mention that 48 of those were spammers? Are you applying your thinking to them too? Because, consider: - Any community on the net that's worthwhile, is worthwhile to spam - Any community worthwhile to spam and not moderated, will be ruined by spam AND, - Any community on the net that's worthwhile, is worthwhile to attention whores - Any community worthwhile to attention whores and not moderated, will be ruined by attention whores Everyone hates moderation, but a community on the net can't survive in the long term without it. Also, - If one applies *any* rules, one is seen as the "final arbiter" and it then becomes a responsibility to apply *enough* rules, consistently and fairly, for the community to survive and for users to understand what it's about. - No *automated* or *user-based* system of moderation yet developed is more effective than a interested, enlightened, light-handed moderator or set of moderators, combined with a strong community. Slashdot, there's your user-based moderation at work. Is it so great? Kuro5hin, on which every comment was rated, turned into a clique of enormous proportions and eventually partly failed due to personal attacks on the owner. (Have I been personally attacked or threatened due to the Cellar: yes) There's also a paradox: - Any community worthwhile will take resources - Resources are a cost to someone - Anything that's a cost to someone requires them to see a benefit - Benefits are usually editorial or commercial - Editorial/commercial bents make shitty communities On the Cellar, most of the costs are handled by donations and I accept the headaches of actually running it because it's a cool hobby to have. Plus I'm fascinated by the online society, and have studied it in detail all this time. The paradox is why there are precious few completely unmanaged communities like AG, which I'm guessing only lives out of the goodness of some anonymous sysadmin's heart. In the long run, someone has to pay for the new disk and someone has to take the time to install it. Why should they? |
. . . hmmmmmm . . . because AG rocks so hard?
|
Seriously though, I figure AG stays up because #1 it runs a little ad space #2 it provides a link to other commercial ventures, and #3 Michael must have a soft spot in his hearts for us.
What you've managed here, without commercial interest, is very impressive. |
AudioGalaxy was based on a file-trading model of community building, and as it happened, the community stayed in place, to a degree, after the music went away - lo those many years ago. For better or worse it continues to chug along, with occasional maintenance by Michael, for whatever his reasons are. Many of us have speculated that AG is a massive sociological experiment - sound familiar?
|
it is a well established conspirousy theory that their are only about 3-4 actual cellerites , every body else is just a dummy account ;)
|
Quote:
And yes it does matter. Glarkware rules! |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Oh, man, the replies in this thread. I laughed, I cried. Some were great answers exactly what I wanted to hear (particularly LJ's response regarding banning those spewing your personal info, or kiddie porn), some where well thought out and maybe rehearsed (UT's), some were attacks rather than answers some were answers but meant to attack.
About AG, there is an owner there that does ban spammers and trolls, but they have to go a LONG way to get banned. I've never had an account banned, actually I only have one. But, Flint's right, the owner of AG only keeps it open because he has a soft spot for us. And, can I say that I don't enjoy others telling me that I "might enjoy" another message board? It's like "don't let the door hit you on the ass on your way out". I like The Cellar. I really appreciated UT's answer that included some history, because I enjoy the idea of a message board as an interactive hobby. That's why I'm here everyday. |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 09:32 PM. |
Powered by: vBulletin Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.