T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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337.1 | Privacy vs accepting responsibility | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Mar 19 1987 14:19 | 55 |
| In note 316.32, as summarized in this topics base note, Steve Kallis
suggests that all notes should be signed. Although I agree in spirit
with this, I wish to disagree with implied detail.
The authors of notes are potentially identified in two ways:
1) By necessity: a NODE::ACCOUNT in the header to the note. The
person in question had avoided (deliberately or not) by posting
from a guest account. There have been several other notes posted,
innocuously I think, from "guest" or "group" accounts of various
kinds.
2) By choice: by a personal signature (generally first name, nickname,
or initials) at the bottom of the posting. This is friendly and
I strongly encourage people doing it (as most posters do). This
is a rather "conversational" conference, and the signatures give a
feeling that we are being talked to, and possibly replying, to a
"real person".
I can think of two reasons, beyond carelessness, why someone should seek
to be unidentified:
1) They intend to make a posting which they either know or suspect will
be considered abuse. They are seeking to avoid just responsibility
for their actions. This is what we are worried may be the situation
in the case of the apparent advertisement which sparked this
discussion. Needless to say, this is inappropriate.
2) For privacy. This conference deals with subjects that are extremely
personal and subjects for which people may be stigmatized for their
legitimate opinions. Under these conditions I think that it is
appropriate for people to *publicly* withhold their identities.
The appropriate mechanism in the second case *is not*, however, to use
an untraceable account. The correct way is to ask someone in the
conference you trust, Dave Stanley (our moderator), myself or anyone else
you feel "simpatico" with, to post it for you. That person can add a line
to the beginning explaining that they are posting it for someone who wishes
to remain anonymous.
I would urge anyone wishing to do this, however, to *not* forego the
personal signature -- instead use a pseudonym (obviously so if you wish).
As well as making it more personal (without making it less private) it
allows anyone commenting in notes, or sending mail to the "actual poster"
for forwarding to refer to the author as something other than "the author
of note xxx.yy". Furthermore, if you post something else, people can
relate the two notes.
A further comment -- if you are thinking about posting something which you
are not sure is appropriate (e.g., your brother-in-law is selling a
*really* neat device which you think DEJAVUers may be interested in), *ask
the moderator before posting*. It's Dave's job (volunteer, of course) to
make such judgments.
Topher
|
337.2 | Good Topic! | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Thu Mar 19 1987 14:35 | 24 |
| Continuing the continuation --
When individual accounts are used, all notes are automatically "signed"
-- see the upper left-hand corner of this reply, f'rinstance. On
guest accounts or joint accounts, this isn't the case.
Note, though, I _always_ sign my notes (barring one or two inadvertent
^Zs, and even then, I _intended_ to sign). It's a courtesy.
There are several things that can help sour a conference. One is
personal attack; I'm more than gratified we see little (if any --
and I can't recall a case) of that in this conference. A second
is fraud/untruth; the members of this conference, even where they
disagree, seem to respect that the other person's point of view,
while different, isn't "obviously" wrong. A third is argument for
its own sake, something pleasingly absent here. And another is
commercialism, which might be attempting to rear its head.
This is a really good conference, and as long as we're sensitized to
possible pitfalls, it'll continue to be.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
337.3 | Glad to help | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Thu Mar 19 1987 14:47 | 15 |
| Re .1:
[Topher, you snuck in there before I could respond! :-)]
If anyone wishes me to act as an intermediary, I'll be glad to do
so (barring nodal breakdowns) for "too personal" questions. I've
dome that already, once, and am willing to do so again. I'll even
paraphrase it, if it's not too long [or _much_ too long :-)].
But I like Topher's idea: use a pseudonym. If you can't think of
a pen-name and use me as a conduit [never "channel" :-)], I'll assign
one.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
337.4 | ?questions? | MSTIME::RABKE | | Thu Mar 19 1987 17:05 | 38 |
|
Although I did not see the original note I do in agree with most
of the guidelines set forth in previous notes in this topic.
However, I (ME, this is personal not advice) would think 2ce of
sending another member of this conference something to post for me
because it was so intensely personal that I could not sign my name but
wanted to share it anyway. Not that the people who have volunteered
to be the "conduit" aren't trustworthy but I wouldn't not want
ANYONE to KNOW who posted it. However this would pertain to
an experience and not an opinion or endorsement. Both of those should
be signed especially if it is critical. It's really easy to
take shots if you are not standing on the front line.
Question - Do you think it is appropriate to post a notice of
someone's appearance, or special event being held in our area?
Is it appropriate to notify the readers about someone/thing
we have found that we find "nifty"? How can we best handle those
so they don't sound like commercials.
How about getting feedback on a person, event, or thing that we are
considering seeing, attending, or buying? This could open the
door for an advertisement like reply.
As a specific, I posted the note on Shirley MacLaine's appearance
in Denver because I thought there may be 1 or more members that may be
interested in seeing her. Sort of like telling a friend that some-
thing is going to happen.
In general (depending on what they are or how the note is announced)
I think these are perfectly appropriate (I must because I've done
all 3). BTW, I'm not feeling picked on so if you are picking on me,
you'll have to be more blunt -)
Jayna
|
337.5 | there ... there, Jayna | MASTER::EPETERSON | | Thu Mar 19 1987 17:20 | 13 |
| Jayna,
I can't speak for others, but you noted about a specific topic that
had been noted on before. Further, you included your personal
impressions because you had more first hand knowledge than other
noters. You also included enough information for others to gain
the same first hand experience you had for the purpose of matching
notes later. I don't think that is the same as the hidden note.
That is unless Jayna is a psudo-name for Shirley :-)
Marion
(who_doesn't_usually_sign_her_name_for_no_particula_reason)
|
337.6 | !Replies! | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Mar 23 1987 10:51 | 22 |
| RE: .4
All of those seem to me to be perfectly legitimate uses of the notes.
The critical issue is personal gain (especially financial) direct
or indirect. The note in question *sounded* like an advertisement
with the added "red flag" that it seemed that someone had gone to
some trouble to avoid begin easily tracable as the source of the
note. I recommended it be hidden (not deleted) until it could be
confirmed whether or not it was what it looked like it might be.
There is even, in my opinion (though Dave and DEC are the arbiters)
circumstances under which someone with financial interests can post
information -- to wit: in clear and direct response to a question
asked by someone else. The note under these conditions should be
identified as coming from someone with a direct or indirect connection
to the "product" and should attempt to stick to the facts and to
avoid any "hype".
Finding out about opportunities is part of what this conference
is about.
Topher
|