Like the fact the Facebook has a picture of your real face right there, incentivizing everyone to play nice, while we are hobbled with only aliases here.
My impression is that real-names-and-faces systems incentivize everyone to play to their expected audience’s biases, not to be nice. If the audience enjoys being nasty to someone, real-names-and-faces systems strongly disincentivize expressions of toleration.
My impression is that real-names-and-faces systems incentivize everyone to play to their expected audience’s biases, not to be nice. If the audience enjoys being nasty to someone, real-names-and-faces systems strongly disincentivize expressions of toleration.
The very nastiest trolls I’ve encountered really just do not give a shit. Name, address, phone number, all publicly available.