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7 votes
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I collected my plastic waste for a year, and learned the truth about recycling
14 votes -
Why are we still teaching reading the wrong way?
9 votes -
"Brian Eno's ideas have unexpected resonance for architecture"
5 votes -
The news is bad in Hungary: "Viktor Orban didn’t like what the press was reporting, so he took it over."
11 votes -
Anti-semitisim comes to a city of tolerance
13 votes -
I bought used voting machines on eBay for $100 apiece. What I found was alarming.
26 votes -
Kara Swisher: Who will teach Silicon Valley to be ethical?
12 votes -
What will be left of the people who make our games?
20 votes -
Jamal Khashoggi: What the Arab world needs most is free expression
8 votes -
The new American dream home is one you never have to leave
9 votes -
Internet hacking is about to get much worse - We can no longer leave online security to the market
22 votes -
Are dark kitchens the satanic mills of our era?
7 votes -
How much would you pay to get an extra hour in your day? (aka "Time pressure is stressing us out")
12 votes -
American gerontocracy: Typically, congressional representatives are 20 years older than their constituents. We must have lawmakers who look like the people they represent
18 votes -
Stan is the forgotten man in Nine-Fairfax merger
3 votes -
Did Facebook lLearn anything from the Cambridge Analytica debacle? An even bigger data breach suggests it didn’t.
14 votes -
How 'Supergirl' is changing the game for transgender youth
11 votes -
How economists lost their fear of minimum wage rises
5 votes -
Sorry Apple, but the sweet smell of 6S is enough for me
17 votes -
Journey to a night flower
8 votes -
The Maldives has another shot at democracy – but it needs help. At last, the violent rule of Abdulla Yameen is over. But the nation has a long way to go if it is to restore trust in its institutions.
7 votes -
The Unlikely, Obvious Solution to the Trade War
7 votes -
What artists do you wish would go back to their roots/an older sound of theirs?
What band that you like/used to like makes you wish they would go back to what they used to do? Personally, I wish Maroon 5 would put out more stuff like Songs About Jane. They had a really chill,...
What band that you like/used to like makes you wish they would go back to what they used to do? Personally, I wish Maroon 5 would put out more stuff like Songs About Jane. They had a really chill, jazz-y, very Jamiroquai-esque sound that I dig the hell out of but now Levine's dedicated to pop music full time.
Hardmode: No Weezer
24 votes -
Australia's Labor party laughing as Coalition kowtows to Rupert Murdoch
4 votes -
The coders of Kentucky
7 votes -
What does Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez think about the South China Sea?
12 votes -
We're measuring the economy all wrong
12 votes -
We hold people with power to account. Why not algorithms?
12 votes -
Why computer science students are demanding more ethics classes
22 votes -
Canada betrays its own citizens. Hassan Diab's case is among its most egregious.
8 votes -
Scientific publishing is a rip-off. We fund the research – it should be free
28 votes -
Russia’s brazen lies mock the world. How best to fight for the truth?
10 votes -
Sen. Ben Sasse reveals five point plan to address ethics issues in DC
11 votes -
The ugly history of beautiful things: Perfume
8 votes -
The Republican approach to US voter fraud: Lie
14 votes -
I Am Part of the Resistance Inside the Trump Administration
47 votes -
'Trump is checking out of Asia': What Australia should do about it
6 votes -
The religion of Whiteness becomes a suicide cult
12 votes -
For poorer people in India and many other countries, a computer engineer has found a way to detect breast cancer without radiation
10 votes -
HIV stigma: How we help spreading the virus
5 votes -
US President Donald Trump tweets about white farmers while indigenous peoples face annihilation
9 votes -
Civil disagreement (or, how to get people to consider your meta-opinions while not singling out individuals)
A Short Summary and Introduction Before the Actual Content of This Post: A site—especially a small one, like Tildes—is going to have growing pains. That's natural. It's also natural, and to some...
A Short Summary and Introduction Before the Actual Content of This Post:
A site—especially a small one, like Tildes—is going to have growing pains. That's natural. It's also natural, and to some extent, necessary, for users to raise issue with remedies for these growing pains. However, there's a spectrum of correct ways to do this, and a way to not do this. If you aren't interested in—or think you already have a firm grasp on the subject of—this post, you might want to skip it.
Tildes has reached its first major streak of growing pains, as I'm sure everyone active or lurking's noticed. We've also reached our first few incorrect methods of handling these. There are a few obvious things you shouldn't do, and everyone knows that—tantrums, slurs, personal attacks, etcetera—I'm going to be discussing a less realised one, and ways you could handle it instead.
Now, onto the good stuff.
Repeatedly, when handling issues, Tildes has seen a recurring circumstance. User makes post, upset. User namedrops and or subposts a user (the most apt description I could think of for a term lifted off of Twitter—subtweet—for example, "I'm not saying it's Garfield I'm talking about, but there was a suspiciously large orange cat with a mild food addiction with a fondness for lasagne who really pushed my buttons!" and etcetera). User hits "send." The targets of it feel offended, and the poster gets yelled at by the community for hurting people. No one wins.
The trick to fixing this: stop going out of your way to call out users, directly or indirectly. If you have issue with something someone said, either take it to an administrator, or directly message the user in question (politely, of course.) There's no reason to air dirty laundry in public, and there's no reason to bring personal grievances into the public eye for minor things.
If you notice an issue, do the above, and nothing changes, wait a short while before making a post on it. There's a fair chance it will resolve itself. If you end up feeling the need to make a post, do not mention individual conversations. Do not give examples from actual conversations; make an analogous example and put it into quote blocks. Never name a name or names, don't allow hate to be directed at anyone.
We're all (presumably) adults (or close enough,) here. If you have any desire for Tildes to flourish, act like an adult. Passive aggression isn't the behaviour of one. Aim to have better behaviour than the docs recommend; you might slip up sometimes, but you'll never fall too far if you keep that in mind.
Anyway, if you ended up reading this; thank you for taking the time. I appreciate it. I've spent a lot of time handling large forums, and in comparison to most of you, fairly small, incredibly high-volatility subreddits with immeasurably close communities. If you can't get a community to do the above, or something close to it, it's more or less going to be a death warrant for it. We'd all prefer not to have that happen to Tildes, so I—and presumably, most of us—would really appreciate if people made an effort to stop that from occurring.
Hate to copy reddit's slogan, but really:
Remember the Human.
Thanks again,
Eva.
27 votes -
The man who is fervent about feeding hungry kids, but hates food banks
9 votes -
It’s OK to call racists ‘racist’
17 votes -
The US establishment thinks Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is too radical – with an impending climate disaster, the worry is she isn't radical enough
21 votes -
The shareholder value myth
5 votes -
Elon Musk’s funding for Tesla wasn’t so secure
13 votes -
Canada doesn’t have an inheritance tax. For the sake of democracy, that needs to change.
23 votes -
Americans own less stuff, and that’s reason to be nervous
16 votes