Thursday, April 13, 2006

Commenting

As you may have noticed the comments on this website have got truly out of hand. I want to set up a space where we can have reasonable discussion, and feminists will feel safe. That wasn't happening.

While it felt a little stupid deleting comments that said things like:

Could, Maia or any of the other lesbians or homosexuals on this blog tell me why normal heterosexual men should give a damn if man hating lesbians are pack raped? None of you give a damn about fathers getting alienated from their children because of the feminazis many of them lesbians in Parliament?
Those sorts of comments are begging for mockery. But I knew if I did that my blog wouldn't be the sort of space where anyone could have a sane conversation (plus I got really bored with deleting).

So I've made a couple of changes, I've disallowed anonymous comments, so you have register with blogger. This is a bit of a pain in the ass, and I've had a lot of valuable commentators who do so anonymously. But I can't get to my blog often enough to delete all the assholes who want to post here anonymously.

The other is that I'm adopting Feministe's comment policy "My Blog, My discretion".

7 comments:

  1. Chuck you are not welcome on my blog, please stop posting.

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  2. The other is that I'm adopting Feministe's comment policy "My Blog, My discretion".

    Cripes. What was the policy before?!

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  3. The policy before was that I deleted abusive comments (I often didn't get around to it) and that I wouldn't host any comments that called Louise Nicholas a liar (there are a couple of thread specific comment policies as well, mostly to stop every post on abortion a place where people talked about the morality of abortion).

    Over the last week the only comment policy that I had been enforcing was deleting suppressed information (when that became policy) and deleting degrading comments about Louise Nicholas.

    I've now started deleting degrading comments full stop.

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  4. Well I'm still grumpy about my comment on oppression transcendence being "censored," just so's you know.

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  5. The 300+ comment war on my LJ was the main kicker that lead to me creating hexpletive for Serious Issues blogging.

    Well, actually, it was the 150+ of the 300+ comments that was just misogynistic crap. The rest was interesting.

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  6. Okay Maia. Now I'm starting to see your point. :(

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  7. jftr, I found moderation worked well even in tandem with allowing non-blogger responses. I think blogger just gives you an option to go through the whole list of new messages at once and check: yes, yes, no, no.

    Up to you, of course. But I like getting messages from people who aren't necessarily on this system. It seems a shame to let the trolls drive 'em off. They usually get bored pretty fast once they see they're just not gonna show up, anyway. ime, jmho, etc.

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