I understand your point, but given that sentiment, the sentence “It isn’t at all common for a troll to self-identify as such only after they’ve had bad experiences” confuses me.
Right, as mentioned I meant uncommon. My point is that I don’t think Loosemore’s experience is that different from what often happens. At least in my experience, I’ve seen people who were more or less productive on one forum becomes effectively trolls elsewhere on the internet after having had bad experiences elsewhere. I think a lot of this is due to cognitive dissonance- people don’t like to think that they were being actively stupid or were effectively accidentally trolling, so they convince themselves that those were their goals all along.
I understand your point, but given that sentiment, the sentence “It isn’t at all common for a troll to self-identify as such only after they’ve had bad experiences” confuses me.
Right, as mentioned I meant uncommon. My point is that I don’t think Loosemore’s experience is that different from what often happens. At least in my experience, I’ve seen people who were more or less productive on one forum becomes effectively trolls elsewhere on the internet after having had bad experiences elsewhere. I think a lot of this is due to cognitive dissonance- people don’t like to think that they were being actively stupid or were effectively accidentally trolling, so they convince themselves that those were their goals all along.
Ah, ok. Gotcha.
I agree that people often go from being productive participants to being unproductive, both for the reasons you describe and other reasons.