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Date: 2023-01-08 12:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 12:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 01:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 01:35 pm (UTC)I've ended up adding a small bit of text to all of my link posts on Mastodon specifically to make it possible to filter them out.
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Date: 2023-01-08 01:41 pm (UTC)¹ I'm reminded that many years ago, by the luck of happening along at the right moment with a piece of related and easily adapted code in my back pocket, I once helped someone produce a custom S2 style which filtered entire posts out of their reading page based on detecting a particular trigger word in the text of the post, so that they could remain on LJ/DW and not miss anything else.
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Date: 2023-01-08 01:47 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 02:21 pm (UTC)And those thankfully work both ways, for screening in as much as screening out stuff, depending on the needs and wants of the individual reader. And this ties back into the first item on your list today as well, particularly where "screening in" is concerned!
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Date: 2023-01-08 02:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 03:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 03:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 05:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 05:25 pm (UTC)You said we should label conversations better, but also that you were against trigger warnings. And I don't understand what a trigger warning is that isn't a label.
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Date: 2023-01-08 07:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 07:55 pm (UTC)If that explanation doesn't convey a distinction, then perhaps a counter-question would help. Why would a subject field on a webpage or a chapter title in a book ever need the words "Content Warning" included, if the subject or title was itself an accurate description of the following contents? I'm arguing that those two words chosen by a text's author will add no value. Instead, offer automation that allows readers to customize their personal experience so they feel more self-agency in the resulting interaction. Chapters and indexes are the solution used prior to the computing era, but they work only if they are accurate, not leading readers into inaccurately-identified distractions. Use accurate words, and automation can provide the rest. (Like hashtag filtering, but maybe in the future with AI providing useful "topic clouds" from our actual text, upon which our personal customizations will choose to present/hide discussions for us.)
no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 08:01 pm (UTC)Yes, I agree, things that already have tags don't need anything more specific in general.
If only more sites allowed separate meta tags.
no subject
Date: 2023-01-09 03:53 am (UTC)Now, I don't have PTSD around sports. I just loathe them. I have other filters (e.g anti-orange guy filter, anti-bird site owner filter) where my tolerance level for the subject matter is a lot lower. For those, I wish people were much more eager about CWing their own posts
A CW is just a subject line
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Date: 2023-01-09 06:09 pm (UTC)The content warning method leads to faster permutation explosion, though, since it requires every author to anticipate every possible reader's every possible reaction. When everything is content warned, then there's no longer any such thing as actual text exposition. I've seen at least once site that wanted all posts unrelated to that site's reason-for-existing to be content warned, so they wouldn't normally show up in full height on the local feed. It leads to everything being gated eventually. Which makes simple tagging of topics much more effective, since it can be done automatically without even the author's effort (but it's better with the intentional work). Leaving control over it to the recipient is what provides self-agency and psychological relief, not gating words... or so I'm arguing, at least.
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Date: 2023-01-08 07:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 07:38 pm (UTC)But there's a lot of people who are just "I don't want to encounter politics at all." - and it's that which has been driving the discussion on Mastodon recently. On the one side people saying "This has been my escape from the real world, where I can talk about my passions." And on the other side various minorities saying "I don't get to escape from racism/sexism/homophobia/etc, and I'm not going to hide my posts to make you comfortable while you ignore it all."
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Date: 2023-01-08 07:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 07:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 08:17 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 08:21 pm (UTC)But the evidence I've seen so far is of a bunch of (entirely white) people saying "we like our nice space here with no politics in it" while black people tell them that they aren't going to go back in their box and hide their lives away.
So while it's possible that that's the case, I've (as I said above) not seen any evidence of it.
no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 09:22 pm (UTC)"For a particular axis, I strongly suspect you're right.
But there's a lot of people who are just "I don't want to encounter politics at all." - and it's that which has been driving the discussion on Mastodon recently."
What I meant was:
Percentage of all people who are gay and want an escape from politics so much that they're willing to never discuss the interaction of society and homosexuality: 0.1%
Percentage of all people who are straight, but specifically don't want to encounter discussions of homosexuality: 0.05%
Percentage of all people who are black, and want an escape from politics so much that they're willing to never discuss the interaction of society and race: 0.1%
Percentage of all people who are white, but specifically don't want to encounter discussions of race issues: 0.05%
Percentage of all people who are women, and want an escape from politics so much that they're willing to never discuss the interaction of society and gender: 0.1%
Percentage of all people who are white, but specifically don't want to encounter discussions of gender issues: 0.05%
Percentage of all people who are straight, white men who don't want to discuss race, gender, or homosexuality, because doing so makes them uncomfortable: 10% (Maybe 30%)
So for any individual axis, yes, it's more likely to be a person on that axis who is so fed up with it that they need an escape. But the big mass of complainers about discussion is still that wodge of somewhat-privileged-if-not-deliberately-oppressive people who "Just want to play my wizard school game without having to think about it too much." and object to people bringing "politics" into it.
no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 10:22 pm (UTC)I think the thing that made me inclined to push back was the phrasing you used earlier of "This has been my escape from the real world" because whilst I agree that the proportion of people who are $oppressed group who want to never discuss that oppression is pretty tiny, I would guess that the proportion of people who want to be able to ringfence a space in which they can choose not to discuss it right now is probably close to 1. And contrariwise, I'd be surprised if the real world of the average straight white abled &c man is especially full of discussions of race, gender &c that they need to escape from. My experience is that far more of those kinds of conversations are intracommunity.
no subject
Date: 2023-01-09 09:08 am (UTC)I wonder if the "Discussions of politics are taking over" feeling is similar to the "Women are taking over the conversation" effect - where it only takes 30% of the speech to be by women before people feel like they've dominated the conversation. In a group of a dozen or more people you wouldn't need to have each person bring up an issue more than once a week before at least some people felt like "politics is taking over".
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Date: 2023-01-08 02:19 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 03:26 pm (UTC)I feel like people instinctively want "content warnings" (or "safe spaces") to come with a standard version that's universally correct, but many things don't work like that. It's worth having a generally accepted standard for "what CW are worthwhile in wider society", but different communities and micro-communities and individual blogs are likely to have their own standards too. Some things are useful for tag for everyone because most people find it somewhat disturbing. Some things are only practical to tag if you expect particular people to benefit from it.
Sometimes needs are incompatible and we need to balance them as best we can. The example of "can't add a warning around everything that's a central part of my identity" is a good one. But there can be still be variation: someone's blog or small community might say "I've no problem with people who exercise regularly but for me it triggers distress about weight loss, so please don't talk about it *here*". If someone has a religion that's primarily defined by bigotry, I might want them to warn for it in more circumstances than someone who has another religion.
I also think that this could be improved with technical capabilities. E.g. have a separate way of displaying "content tags that this post/tweet/story is ABOUT" and "content tags that this post/tweet/story contains in passing". Where maybe the first are displayed prominently to everyone, and the second are available if you want them but aren't the first thing you see. Somewhat separating "some people find this difficut" from "this is bad". So that it's possible to tag things you know SOME people find distressing to read, without making the first thing everyone sees a big list of terrible things. And so it would be easy for people to configure their reader so there's some things they don't see at all, or only if they really want to, and other things they might get a warning of. Which is just as relevant for things other than triggers: e.g. I muted some words because I was fed up of seeing some tweets, and I want nudity to be behind a cut in case I'm reading somewhere other people can see over my shoulder.
no subject
Date: 2023-01-08 06:34 pm (UTC)Thought on that line: are spoiler alerts a form of trigger warning? What's being triggered is different than what's normally marked by such warnings, but it functions in the same way: warning people off something they might not want to cast their eyes upon, lest it have a negative effect on their mental functioning.
On the other hand, the answer of "if you don't want to see it, just avoid forums where it's likely to come up" is far too glib. How do you know where it's likely to come up? And the avoiding can cripple your life. My unwillingness to sell my soul to Mark Zuckerberg keeps me off FB where much of life is going on these days.
On that line of glibness, people have told me that if I don't like the Jackson movies, just avoid them. How the heck am I supposed to do that? I'd have to stop reading you; they come up occasionally. I'd have to drop out of all Tolkien discussion, because I don't know of any labeled "no movie talk here." I'd even have to quit my job editing a Tolkien journal, because while we don't publish movie stuff (mostly: we've got an article in the next issue comparing a specific technical aspect in the book and movies), without knowing the movies I wouldn't be able to be on the alert for movie assumptions seeping into discussions of the book.
no subject
Date: 2023-01-09 10:22 am (UTC)And yes, I agree that you can avoid things a certain amount, but it gets trickier the more you want to avoid them, and definitely has side-effects.
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Date: 2023-01-09 01:57 pm (UTC)I feel so strongly about this, that I made that a rule on my Mastodon server.
no subject
Date: 2023-01-10 09:59 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-01-16 01:32 pm (UTC)