I was thinking that it was that people would have to self-modify to adopt US culture. But, actually thinking about what was being said (thanks, MixedNuts) and what I quoted indicates that it was just self-modifying to become familiar with the concepts.
I still think this is unreasonable, due to, for example, the amount of effort it would take to get decent coverage across all areas of the culture, i.e. it’s much easier for US users to make a few annotations (“in the USA”, or “governor of Massachusetts”, to increase googleability at least).
How exactly is it wrong?
If non-US users modify not to be annoyed by these, then:
Readers will keep having to look them up, which they’ll still find annoying (unless the self-modification is really big).
Suggestions will keep being tailored to the US, leading to a lack of general solutions and custom solutions for other countries.
OTOH, I’m not sure what’s wrong with self-modifying to not be annoyed when American users have GetDefaultCountry() return “USA”.
Nothing, I was thinking about the issue in the wrong way and so I have ameliorated my response accordingly.
Hmmm… on reflection, “wrong” is too strong.
I was thinking that it was that people would have to self-modify to adopt US culture. But, actually thinking about what was being said (thanks, MixedNuts) and what I quoted indicates that it was just self-modifying to become familiar with the concepts.
I still think this is unreasonable, due to, for example, the amount of effort it would take to get decent coverage across all areas of the culture, i.e. it’s much easier for US users to make a few annotations (“in the USA”, or “governor of Massachusetts”, to increase googleability at least).