Tuesday, April 10, 2007

You, With the Blog: You're Ugly and Your Mother Dresses You Funny

Hi folks -- now, I realize that I could come to regret this, but I think that Tim O'Reilly's Draft Blogger's Code of Conduct that I've been reading about yesterday and today is stupid and irrelevant to most bloggers (that is, regular folk who aren't among the so-called A-Listers, corporate or otherwise high-traffic  bloggers).

(The part that I might someday regret is if this idea grows legs, a seal of approval, a standards and sanctioning body, annual certification dues, and corporate sponsors, which AOL decides to join as a charter member, causing me immeasurable future heartache, etc. But this is unlikely.)

This all came about from the Kathy Sierra incident that I mentioned a few weeks back (with a follow-up last week).

In response to perceived death threats and generally vile and misogynistic blog nastiness directed at Ms. Sierra, some of the more prominent bloggers out there had suggested ways to try to fight this, one result we see now in the O'Reilly's Draft Blogger's Code of Conduct.

You kind of have to read it. It's a masterpiece of social engineering (the old-fashioned kind, not the "tell me your password" kind) that blends far-reaching legalistic prohibitions:
"We define unacceptable content as anything included or linked to that:
- is being used to abuse, harass, stalk, or threaten others
- is libelous, knowingly false, ad-hominem, or misrepresents another person,
- infringes upon a copyright or trademark
- violates an obligation of confidentiality
- violates the privacy of others"
And combines it with infruriating vagueness:
"We define and determine what is "unacceptable content" on a case-by-case basis, and our definitions are not limited to this list. If we delete a comment or link, we will say so and explainwhy. [We reserve the right to change these standards at any time with no notice.]"
Here's are my initial thoughts, in the rough order they were received:
  • April Fools Day was last week.
  • Given those prohibitions, good luck finding anything to link to.
  • If you have to explain yourself every time you delete a comment from idiots, spammers and trolls, the idiots, spammers and trolls have won.
  • I wonder what kind of badge Wonkette would run
Yeah, they've proposed badges:


"Civility Enforced" vs. "Anything Goes"

All snarks aside, the problem with sort of thing is simply thus:

* The people who would adhere to this kind of speech code are not the people you need a speech code for in the first place.

* The stuff that is already illegal (e.g. death threats, libel, defamation) is, um, already illegal.

* For those of us who use a third-party blogging service (which is the vast majority of bloggers), we're already subject to Terms of Use; for example, the AOL Network's Terms of Use forbids activities that
  1. violates or infringes the rights of others including, without limitation, patent, trademark, trade secret, copyright, publicity or other proprietary rights;
  2. is unlawful, threatening, abusive, harassing, defamatory, libelous, deceptive, fraudulent, invasive of another's privacy, tortious, or contains explicit or graphic descriptions, or accounts of, sexual acts;
  3. victimizes, harasses, degrades, or intimidates an individual or group of individuals on the basis of religion, gender, sexual orientation, race, ethnicity, age, or disability;
Blogger's is similar (see #12, Member Conduct), as is WordPress's, etc.

So, who is this voluntary blogger speech code for? People (or companies) who run their own blogging software on their own hosted servers, who want to show they're on the right side of things by wearing a badge graphic.

Why am I worked up about this?  I despise meaningless gestures, and I especially dislike blanket statements that actually only apply to a very small fraction of people dealing with guilt complexes when they should just put the smack down on idiots, spammers and trolls.

High-traffic blogs have to deal with a lot of crap, since they get a lot of comments, and a some of those commenters just come to take a dump in the punch bowl (as they say). So the blog owners have to deal with it,
even if they're legally shielded from comments posted by others in their blogs.

And there are any number of ways to deal with this, depending on your blog platform -- reviewing all comments before they go live; pre-screening commenters; even disallowing comments entirely or having volunteer, community or even professional moderators.

Blog owners have the absolute freedom to decide what kind of comments they'll allow. I've read of some bloggers who say they feel pressured to not pre-moderate comments, or to keep nasty comments, or to allow anonymous comments, out of some sense of obligation. Who are these people? It's your blog, do what you want.

Now, all that said, I do what I can to maintain a civil atmosphere in whatever blogs I'm involved in. As a relatively small-fry blogger, I don't have to worry about getting lots and lots of comments flooding in that I can't keep up with.

So, to extract a germ of usefulness out of all this silliness, I think an articulated comment and community policy is a good thing (which means I should probably spell one out somewhere: "I reserve the right to delete any comment, for any reason, including those that violate the AOL TOS, or are otherwise useless." See the blog rules my cohorts at the Community Info blog have for theirs.)

Also keep in mind that these are absolutely not new problems, and not restricted to blogs. Check out this Washington Post article from March about similar shenanigans on a law school-themed message board.

Also, since I started drafting this entry yesterday, the folks at BlogHer have a much better and more concise analysis of this, and of course, all the A-Listers are weighing in as well.

How do you feel about comments and blogger conduct codes? Leave a comment of your own below.

Thanks -- Joe


12 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm generally opposed to people adding redundant rules/laws.  As you point out, there are already plenty of laws on the books that do cover blogging.  The stuff that's illegal is already illegal.  That in itself ventures into a whole other debate, which I won't do here, because that could just get ugly.

What's important is that people who do use blogging in a manner that violates the law be punished.  When people do stuff and get away with it, then it only encourages the behavior.  Do we really need a blogging code of conduct?  I mean really!  There's already been one, and it's been around for centuries (yes, before blogging was even invented).  It's called COMMON SENSE, people!  Of course, I've often wonder why it's called common when it seems so bloody rare.

Bill, the Wildcat
http://journals.aol.com/knightbek/TheWildcatsLair/
http://wildcatslair.blogspot.com/

Anonymous said...

Joe, it's exactly as you stated: people who would comply to such a set of guidelines aren't the ones who need them. All personal blogs are somewhat ego-driven  so the author will ultimately decide what's acceptable, and each owner has his or her threshold for disagreement and insult.

The only stringent guidelines that have to be adhered to are those governed by law. Labeling a site "anything goes" would not remove that responsibility from anyone involved, either as author, or commentator.

I always thought it good protocol to explain why a comment was deleted, but that could just lend to the "wrestle with a pig" train of thought. It's best to give as little notice to attention hounds and troublemakers. The Internet has proven that there are far worse things than bugs crawling under the rugs out there.

But, as soon as you attempt to curtail or govern free speech in anyway, you invite trouble. Leave it to the lawmakers to regulate criminal behavior, but leave it to the authors to regulate creative behavior.

Anonymous said...

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Anonymous said...

Kathi -- I'm actually registered to attend the milblogging conference, though I might be handing it off to someone who's more focused on the military community stuff here at AOL. We'll have to see... -- Joe

Anonymous said...

It's unfortunate that AOL doesn't always abide by their own guidelines of TOS with similar situations.  

Anonymous said...

Jcole16757 -- I'm sorry you've encountered problems that weren't resolved to your satisfaction. People can always report TOS violations from the appropriate link in the product; Keyword: Notify AOL in the AOL client, or sending e-mail to screen name AOLPeopleMGR.  Thanks -- Joe

Anonymous said...

From past experience, the tools given to AOL members to report situations are not very effective.  Most of the time you never hear back from an AOL representative.  It's all water under the bridge at this point.  

Anonymous said...

I am of the opinion, that if it is your blog you can delete any comment in it if you want. I do not need a code of conduct. The ones that do will not adhere to it anyway. I think they are asking for a whole lot of trouble by posting any badges.
Celeste
http://journals.aol.com/csandhollow/Mydayand thoughts
http://celeste-cslife.blogspot.com

Anonymous said...

If there is a code this one is ok lol
http://blogging.wikia.com/wiki/Alternate_Code_of_Conduct

Anonymous said...

I blogged about it.
http://sepintx.blogspot.com/2007/04/seeing-shades-of-green.html

I'd say you have reason for concern as the bloggercode very well could influence whatever blog policy you operate under now. The discussions surrounding the code are thought provoking though. What are my personal blog behavior limits in addition to the TOS agreements of the various services I use to create my photoblog? I really don't articulate those much at all.

Anonymous said...

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Anonymous said...

Hi Joe,
I have to agree with you: "It's you blog, do what you want." As long as you are not a threat or absolutely out of control, this "conduct" nonsense is just that: NONSENSE.
This is just my humble little opinion. I disagree with the other writer who said that TOS reports are not looked at or there is nothing done. I have had personal experience with this as have others with great results from AOL. And no matter what I will stand by that.
Thank you Joe for posting and writing about this. It's important and a "code of blogging conduct" at this point I feel is not necessary.

Thanks again,
Gayla
http://journals.aol.com/schoolgal040/Unfussy/

PS: This code of conduct would be OK for the many, many perverts and pedafiles in this sick Internet world, but there is a very fine line here.