Subject: I think hS covered hard consequences.
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Posted on: 2017-05-01 14:54:00 UTC

That is, things we have any kind of power to enforce. It's basically just bans.

I believe revocation of Permission has not been used as a consequence because Permission is not (formally) a badge of social merit, it's simply a checkmark in the box next to "you can write stuff we want to read." Permission Givers are not mods, and we are not (formally) invested with the authority to judge anything besides one's ability to write missions. We're not going to give Permission to someone who has proven they can't function in the community before they request it—personally, I think the ability to get along with other PPCers is an indicator of the ability to grasp the kind of creativity and humor that makes missions work—but that said, I think we (certainly hS) would rather not blur the line any more than it is to begin with. We're Permission Givers, that's it.

There are also soft consequences, though, such as loss of respect and shunning (which is what's happening if a majority of the community avoids speaking to someone when they hadn't avoided them before). The trouble is, I don't think those tend to be very effective without explicitly saying that's what's happening, which we never have done, IIRC. It's too easy to rationalize away, especially since the Board doesn't move all that quickly all the time, and it requires that the subject be sensitive to that kind of social cue, which is often at the root of the problem to begin with.

I think informal social consequences are good and useful tools, but if they're not working, we need to recognize it's time to speak up clearly about what the problems are, not just let them go on festering. With proper dialogue, I believe most problems can be solved without resorting to hard consequences.

~Neshomeh

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