An obvious direct effect is whether Sarah speaks up in her defense. If you say “Somebody did XYZ, which are bad”, then for Sarah to say “Well, actually, X didn’t happen, Y is an exaggeration, and Z had mitigating circumstances, plus the accuser is hypersensitive and prone to misinterpreting things” would identify her as the alleged villain, and therefore probably lower her reputation even among people who mostly believed her. On the other hand, if you say “Sarah did XYZ”, then that makes it very likely that Sarah will say things in her defense, since she has everything to gain and nothing to lose (unless her defense manages to make her sound worse, which probably occasionally happens).
So, if it’s possible for Sarah to severely undermine your claims, then giving her name basically guarantees she’ll do it, while hiding her name (and any identifying details) gives her a good reason not to. So if you want the point “XYZ are bad” to stand, then keeping Sarah out of it could be tactically useful. (Though, on the audience side, if I see a post that says “Hey, everyone, XYZ happened and they’re bad”, and then I hear that there’s someone who could have severely undermined the author’s claims, I wonder “Hmm, is this actually a credible report? I’d like to know, because I don’t want to make policy decisions based on exaggerations and falsehoods—that leads to moral panics.”)
Now, I guess you can separate the claims “XYZ are bad” and “Sarah did XYZ”. Potentially even Sarah could respond to a unified post by saying “Yes, XYZ would be bad if I did them. However, I did not.” In terms of pure logic, there’s no reason one should interfere with the other. In terms of “discussion on the post getting dominated by he-said she-said rather than by weighing principles and deciding what the rules should be”, one can certainly distract from the other.
But then, another aspect is that someone who wants to hurt Sarah for other reasons could be motivated to say “Sarah did XYZ, which are bad”. And as part of this, they could be motivated to exaggerate the badness of XYZ even when they’re claiming to discuss the abstract general case—”X is especially harmful to people who …”. People reading your post may bear this in mind. And Sarah, in conducting her defense, is motivated to downplay the badness of XYZ—”You haven’t mentioned the obvious coping strategies that are likely to be employed, and the research that claims X is so harmful is flawed in several ways …”. The same motivations might be extended to other people who are on “your side” or “Sarah’s side”.
Whereas if Sarah’s name is kept out of it, then that reduces these motivations, and therefore (probably) the degree to which they, and suspicion of the motivations, taint the abstract discussion. (On the one hand, Sarah might anticipate that her name might leak eventually [perhaps specifically to a subset of the audience who knew some private details] and still be motivated to exaggerate her arguments about the abstract case. On the other hand, for Sarah to do so risks leaking her identity—”Hey, why do you care so much about defending this unnamed villain?”. Such leaking risk is likely less for Sarah’s defenders, if any.)
All the above is heavily affected by the details of the situation. Is the harm, and its extent, obvious and objectively verifiable? (If so, why doesn’t everyone already know XYZ are bad? Perhaps it’s obvious once you see the evidence and most people are just ignorant.) Is the accuser robustly credible, or will Sarah be able to dig up and show a history of the accuser being hypersensitive, misinterpreting things, and/or lying? Is Sarah very good at arguing? Is there other bad blood between the accuser and Sarah? Does the intended audience have a lot of people who are highly motivated to take Sarah’s side or the accuser’s side?
The above all feed into the final question: what would a rational audience member deduce about the decision to not name the culprit? Various reasons are possible, and the details/context determine which are plausible. It may help to state the reason in the post (of course, it will likely attract some people arguing against it).
An obvious direct effect is whether Sarah speaks up in her defense. If you say “Somebody did XYZ, which are bad”, then for Sarah to say “Well, actually, X didn’t happen, Y is an exaggeration, and Z had mitigating circumstances, plus the accuser is hypersensitive and prone to misinterpreting things” would identify her as the alleged villain, and therefore probably lower her reputation even among people who mostly believed her. On the other hand, if you say “Sarah did XYZ”, then that makes it very likely that Sarah will say things in her defense, since she has everything to gain and nothing to lose (unless her defense manages to make her sound worse, which probably occasionally happens).
So, if it’s possible for Sarah to severely undermine your claims, then giving her name basically guarantees she’ll do it, while hiding her name (and any identifying details) gives her a good reason not to. So if you want the point “XYZ are bad” to stand, then keeping Sarah out of it could be tactically useful. (Though, on the audience side, if I see a post that says “Hey, everyone, XYZ happened and they’re bad”, and then I hear that there’s someone who could have severely undermined the author’s claims, I wonder “Hmm, is this actually a credible report? I’d like to know, because I don’t want to make policy decisions based on exaggerations and falsehoods—that leads to moral panics.”)
Now, I guess you can separate the claims “XYZ are bad” and “Sarah did XYZ”. Potentially even Sarah could respond to a unified post by saying “Yes, XYZ would be bad if I did them. However, I did not.” In terms of pure logic, there’s no reason one should interfere with the other. In terms of “discussion on the post getting dominated by he-said she-said rather than by weighing principles and deciding what the rules should be”, one can certainly distract from the other.
But then, another aspect is that someone who wants to hurt Sarah for other reasons could be motivated to say “Sarah did XYZ, which are bad”. And as part of this, they could be motivated to exaggerate the badness of XYZ even when they’re claiming to discuss the abstract general case—”X is especially harmful to people who …”. People reading your post may bear this in mind. And Sarah, in conducting her defense, is motivated to downplay the badness of XYZ—”You haven’t mentioned the obvious coping strategies that are likely to be employed, and the research that claims X is so harmful is flawed in several ways …”. The same motivations might be extended to other people who are on “your side” or “Sarah’s side”.
Whereas if Sarah’s name is kept out of it, then that reduces these motivations, and therefore (probably) the degree to which they, and suspicion of the motivations, taint the abstract discussion. (On the one hand, Sarah might anticipate that her name might leak eventually [perhaps specifically to a subset of the audience who knew some private details] and still be motivated to exaggerate her arguments about the abstract case. On the other hand, for Sarah to do so risks leaking her identity—”Hey, why do you care so much about defending this unnamed villain?”. Such leaking risk is likely less for Sarah’s defenders, if any.)
All the above is heavily affected by the details of the situation. Is the harm, and its extent, obvious and objectively verifiable? (If so, why doesn’t everyone already know XYZ are bad? Perhaps it’s obvious once you see the evidence and most people are just ignorant.) Is the accuser robustly credible, or will Sarah be able to dig up and show a history of the accuser being hypersensitive, misinterpreting things, and/or lying? Is Sarah very good at arguing? Is there other bad blood between the accuser and Sarah? Does the intended audience have a lot of people who are highly motivated to take Sarah’s side or the accuser’s side?
The above all feed into the final question: what would a rational audience member deduce about the decision to not name the culprit? Various reasons are possible, and the details/context determine which are plausible. It may help to state the reason in the post (of course, it will likely attract some people arguing against it).