FWIW, I don’t avoid posting because of worries of criticism or nitpicking at all. I can’t recall a moment that’s ever happened.
But I do avoid posting once in a while, and avoid commenting, because I don’t always have enough confidence that, if things start to move in an unproductive way, there will be any *resolution* to that.
If I’d been on Lesswrong a lot 10 years ago, this wouldn’t stop me much. I used to be very… well, not happy exactly, but willing, to spend hours fighting the good fight and highlighting all the ways people are being bullies or engaging in bad argument norms or polluting the epistemic commons or using performative Dark Arts and so on.
But moderators of various sites (not LW) have often failed to be able to adjudicate such situations to my satisfaction, and over time I just felt like it wasn’t worth the effort in most cases.
From what I’ve observed, LW mod team is far better than most sites at this. But when I imagine a nearer-to-perfect-world, it does include a lot more “heavy handed” moderation in the form of someone outside of an argument being willing and able to judge and highlight whether someone is failing in some essential way to be a productive conversation partner.
I’m not sure what the best way to do this would be, mechanically, given realistic time and energy constraints. Maybe a special “Flag a moderator” button that has a limited amount of uses per month (increased by account karma?) that calls in a mod to read over the thread and adjudicate? Maybe even that would be too onerous, but *shrugs* There’s probably a scale at which it is valuable for most people while still being insufficient for someone like Duncan. Maybe the amount decreases each time you’re ruled against.
Overall I don’t want to overpromise something like “if LW has a stronger concentration of force expectation for good conversation norms I’d participate 100x more instead of just reading.” But 10x more to begin with, certainly, and maybe more than that over time.
Maybe a special “Flag a moderator” button that has a limited amount of uses per month (increased by account karma?) that calls in a mod to read over the thread and adjudicate?
This is similar to the idea for the Sunshine Regiment from the early days of LW 2.0, where the hope was that if we have a wide team of people who were sometimes called on to do mod-ish actions (like explaining what’s bad about a comment, or how it could have been worded, or linking to the relevant part of The Sequences, or so on), we could get much more of it. (It both would be a counterspell to bystander effect (when someone specific gets assigned a comment to respond to), a license to respond at all (because otherwise who are you to complain about this comment?), a counterfactual matching incentive to do it (if you do the work you’re assigned, you also fractionally encourage everyone else in your role to do the work they’re assigned), and a scheme to lighten the load (as there might be more mods than things to moderate).)
It ended up running into the problem that, actually there weren’t all that many people suited to and interested in doing moderator work, and so there was the small team of people who would do it (which wasn’t large enough to reliably feel on top of things instead of needing to prioritize to avoid scarcity).
I also don’t think there’s enough uniformity of opinion among moderators or high-karma-users or w/e that having a single judge evaluate whole situations will actually resolve them. (My guess is that if I got assigned to this case Duncan would have wanted to appeal, and if RobertM got assigned to this case Said would have wanted to appeal, as you can see from the comments they wrote in response. This is even tho I think RobertM and I agree on the object-level points and only disagree on interpretations and overall judgments of relevance!) I feel more optimistic about something like “a poll” of a jury drawn from some limited pool, where some situations go 10-0, others 7-3, some 5-5; this of course 10xs the costs compared to a single judge. (And open-access polls both have the benefit and drawback of volunteer labor.)
All good points, and yeah I did consider the issue of “appeals” but considered “accept the judgement you get” part of the implicit (or even explicit if necessary) agreeement made when raising that flag in the first place. Maybe it would require both people to mutually accept it.
But I’m glad the “pool of people” variation was tried, even if it wasn’t sustainable as volunteer work.
It ended up running into the problem that, actually there weren’t all that many people suited to and interested in doing moderator work
I’m not sure that’s true? I was asked at the time to be Sunshine mod, I said yes, and then no one ever followed up to assign me any work. At some point later I was given an explanation, but I don’t remember it.
FWIW, I don’t avoid posting because of worries of criticism or nitpicking at all. I can’t recall a moment that’s ever happened.
But I do avoid posting once in a while, and avoid commenting, because I don’t always have enough confidence that, if things start to move in an unproductive way, there will be any *resolution* to that.
If I’d been on Lesswrong a lot 10 years ago, this wouldn’t stop me much. I used to be very… well, not happy exactly, but willing, to spend hours fighting the good fight and highlighting all the ways people are being bullies or engaging in bad argument norms or polluting the epistemic commons or using performative Dark Arts and so on.
But moderators of various sites (not LW) have often failed to be able to adjudicate such situations to my satisfaction, and over time I just felt like it wasn’t worth the effort in most cases.
From what I’ve observed, LW mod team is far better than most sites at this. But when I imagine a nearer-to-perfect-world, it does include a lot more “heavy handed” moderation in the form of someone outside of an argument being willing and able to judge and highlight whether someone is failing in some essential way to be a productive conversation partner.
I’m not sure what the best way to do this would be, mechanically, given realistic time and energy constraints. Maybe a special “Flag a moderator” button that has a limited amount of uses per month (increased by account karma?) that calls in a mod to read over the thread and adjudicate? Maybe even that would be too onerous, but *shrugs* There’s probably a scale at which it is valuable for most people while still being insufficient for someone like Duncan. Maybe the amount decreases each time you’re ruled against.
Overall I don’t want to overpromise something like “if LW has a stronger concentration of force expectation for good conversation norms I’d participate 100x more instead of just reading.” But 10x more to begin with, certainly, and maybe more than that over time.
This is similar to the idea for the Sunshine Regiment from the early days of LW 2.0, where the hope was that if we have a wide team of people who were sometimes called on to do mod-ish actions (like explaining what’s bad about a comment, or how it could have been worded, or linking to the relevant part of The Sequences, or so on), we could get much more of it. (It both would be a counterspell to bystander effect (when someone specific gets assigned a comment to respond to), a license to respond at all (because otherwise who are you to complain about this comment?), a counterfactual matching incentive to do it (if you do the work you’re assigned, you also fractionally encourage everyone else in your role to do the work they’re assigned), and a scheme to lighten the load (as there might be more mods than things to moderate).)
It ended up running into the problem that, actually there weren’t all that many people suited to and interested in doing moderator work, and so there was the small team of people who would do it (which wasn’t large enough to reliably feel on top of things instead of needing to prioritize to avoid scarcity).
I also don’t think there’s enough uniformity of opinion among moderators or high-karma-users or w/e that having a single judge evaluate whole situations will actually resolve them. (My guess is that if I got assigned to this case Duncan would have wanted to appeal, and if RobertM got assigned to this case Said would have wanted to appeal, as you can see from the comments they wrote in response. This is even tho I think RobertM and I agree on the object-level points and only disagree on interpretations and overall judgments of relevance!) I feel more optimistic about something like “a poll” of a jury drawn from some limited pool, where some situations go 10-0, others 7-3, some 5-5; this of course 10xs the costs compared to a single judge. (And open-access polls both have the benefit and drawback of volunteer labor.)
All good points, and yeah I did consider the issue of “appeals” but considered “accept the judgement you get” part of the implicit (or even explicit if necessary) agreeement made when raising that flag in the first place. Maybe it would require both people to mutually accept it.
But I’m glad the “pool of people” variation was tried, even if it wasn’t sustainable as volunteer work.
I’m not sure that’s true? I was asked at the time to be Sunshine mod, I said yes, and then no one ever followed up to assign me any work. At some point later I was given an explanation, but I don’t remember it.