Date: 2023-01-08 12:33 pm (UTC)
altamira16: A sailboat on the water at dawn or dusk (Default)
From: [personal profile] altamira16
That second link is very interesting and gets at the heart of the arguments over Mastodon CW culture.

Date: 2023-01-08 01:26 pm (UTC)
simont: A picture of me in 2016 (Default)
From: [personal profile] simont
I mean it's not even a question of not being able to escape. If someone is discussing a thing I don't want to hear about, I can always not read that blog/forum/site/whatever. It's only a question of which of us bears the burden: is it on them to make sure they keep their stuff out of my face, or on me to keep my face out of their stuff?

Date: 2023-01-08 01:41 pm (UTC)
simont: A picture of me in 2016 (Default)
From: [personal profile] simont
Indeed, that's part of the burden I mean – it's not just the logistical hassle of withdrawing from a given forum or making your own anti-trigger arrangements¹, it's also the fact that if you do, you miss other things posted there. Certainly in some cases there will be disadvantages to doing it either way round, and it's a question of which one is worse.

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.

Date: 2023-01-08 01:47 pm (UTC)
channelpenguin: (Default)
From: [personal profile] channelpenguin
Hmm, I was never a Twitter person, and it wasn't politics, rather advertising + "comparison kills contentment" + the waste of time that took me off Facebook, but I do still miss keeping up with my real (but long distance) friends. So I can see the problem.

Date: 2023-01-08 02:21 pm (UTC)
dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)
From: [personal profile] dewline
Hashtags, right?

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!
Edited Date: 2023-01-08 02:30 pm (UTC)

Date: 2023-01-08 03:21 pm (UTC)
mellowtigger: (flameproof)
From: [personal profile] mellowtigger
Triggers are still on my list of "unpopular opinions" topics. (Thankfully, I've knocked out 2 of these lingering thoughts in recent months.) I already use Mastodon filters to hide many posts that use certain keywords, and I enjoy this feature a lot. I think that trigger warnings need to just go away in principle, instead opting for a culture that encourages appropriately labeling discussions.

Date: 2023-01-08 05:11 pm (UTC)
mellowtigger: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mellowtigger
As implemented in Mastodon programming, the content warnings are a visual mess, even if you choose settings that automatically show them so they aren't also a carpal tunnel hazard. Instead of being metadata that the viewer can choose how to handle, they are actively bad gui features. Separately from Mastodon, as a concept, they don't help trauma survivors. A recent meta-analysis reached the conclusion that they simply don't work for their intended purpose.

Date: 2023-01-08 07:37 pm (UTC)
wildeabandon: picture of me (Default)
From: [personal profile] wildeabandon
A trigger warning is a very specific kind of label, which implies that the thing which is labelled is likely to be traumatising. A culture of providing content notes on a neutral basis provides all the benefits of trigger warnings, but doesn't cause the problem highlighted in the post you linked to of making people feel as though there's something wrong with them because an aspect of their life is being flagged as traumatic.

Date: 2023-01-08 07:55 pm (UTC)
mellowtigger: (hypercube)
From: [personal profile] mellowtigger
Ah! Yes, hashtags are already far into that territory, simultaneously an unobtrusive part of the grammar while also meta-tags that can be used for filtering. That alone might suffice if people and platforms used the technology more commonly. Hashtags don't have to be provided before/after/outside other text, because they are explicitly part of the text already. Use accurate words, and your text is already self-identified for topic indexing. An index which the reader can choose to use as labels, providing "Warning: Hazardous Content Ahead!" interruptions not specifically provided by the author.

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.)

Date: 2023-01-09 03:53 am (UTC)
poshmerchant: (Default)
From: [personal profile] poshmerchant
I have a very bland example of why CWs are better than filtering. My anti-sports filter on Mastodon is now up to 48 keywords and I expect that I will continue to grow indefinitely. People who like sports keep finding new ways of describing sports. I'm a glutton for punishment because I browse the federated timeline (i.e. firehose of everything) to discover new people to follow, so I keep seeing sports

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

Date: 2023-01-09 06:09 pm (UTC)
mellowtigger: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mellowtigger
I do the same with all things Trump, Musk, Twitter, or new Star Trek. I enjoy seeing those miniscule messages that something on that topic is currently hidden from me. The author still gets to enjoy their exposition, and I still get to enjoy my continued ignorance. :) Filtering (and its opposite, hashtag subscription) is very effective.

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.

Date: 2023-01-08 07:30 pm (UTC)
wildeabandon: picture of me (Default)
From: [personal profile] wildeabandon
But surely the people who are mostly likely to want to escape from the politics of a particular axis of oppression are precisely those who are affected by it? I'm not someone who find trigger warnings particularly helpful, but if I was, the things I would want warning for would be discussion of homophobia, transphobia, and anti-autism sentiment.

Date: 2023-01-08 07:54 pm (UTC)
wildeabandon: picture of me (Default)
From: [personal profile] wildeabandon
Is it possible that the side who want a space free from politics are a mixture of those who want it because they're uncomfortable thinking about other people being oppressed and those who want it because the real world is full of people directing racism/sexism/homophobia/etc at them?

Date: 2023-01-08 08:17 pm (UTC)
wildeabandon: picture of me (Default)
From: [personal profile] wildeabandon
But you just acknowledged that the people who are most likely to want to escape from the politics of a particular axis of oppression are precisely those who are affected by it. That is evidence - probabilistic, admittedly, but is there anything more concrete causing you to assume otherwise?

Date: 2023-01-08 10:22 pm (UTC)
wildeabandon: picture of me (Default)
From: [personal profile] wildeabandon
Thanks for spelling that out. And I must of course recognise that I'm not seeing any of these discussions because I'm allergic to social media that aren't DW.

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.

Date: 2023-01-08 02:19 pm (UTC)
dewline: Exclamation: "Hear, Hear!" (celebration)
From: [personal profile] dewline
Amen. I think we need to (have/continue) that discussion.

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