Subject: Comments on writing
Author:
Posted on: 2017-04-30 06:34:00 UTC

A lot of bits have been spilled about beta conduct and concrit. So, my points, some of which are rather terse because the detailed versions have already come up:

- Don't jump the gun on your betas. That's rude. Not banable, though.

- If you're a beta, don't slink off without warning for long periods of time.

- Obviously, you have final say over your work. However, completely ignoring your betas isn't good. Explaining why you disagree with beta comments is probably a good thing. Not bannable either, or particularly enforceable.

- Offering to beta and then not actually doing it is also rude. We shouldn't ban for it, though.

- Bulldozing as a beta: Rot cool. If it veers into bullying, that's potentially cause for consequences.

- [insert Nesh's comments about writer/beta communication here]

- A few folks have said they don't ask for betas publicly because it's hard to turn someone down or because turning someone down causes drama. This is a cultural issue. Folks, just because there's a call for betas doesn't mean the person calling has to take your offer. The fact that they didn't take you up on an offer of beta reading isn't (generally) an attack on you or your abilities.

- Ignoring concrit. Um, if you're doing that, it makes you a bit hypocritical. That being said, disagreeing with concrit isn't ignoring it.

- We should, like several people said, be encouraging better concrit-taking behavior politely and firmly.

- Sergio (among others?) proposed Permission Suspended for serious, persistent quality issues without improvement. The one case I think that might have been appropriate, there was a retraction. Therefore, that proposal is so very hypothetical that we shouldn't enshrine it as policy at this time. If a situation where we need to consider that sanction comes up, we can discuss it in that context and have a specific vote.

- Overreacting to concrit isn't good either. Again, Nesh said it rather well, so consider her thoughts on this incorporated into my post.

- I don't see us as the fandom police, and neither does just about everyone else here (right?). So we shouldn't be handing out bans for writing badfic (and certainly not for having written it in the past, since we're about improvement here). That being said, if you're simultaneously publishing badfic that you're not taking concrit on and doing PPC stuff, you might suffer a loss of reputation here because you're being a bit of a hypocrite. If you don't have Permission yet, that sort of thing could be potential grounds for a denial, I think.

- I'm pretty sure there's a widespread notion (even here) that being un-canonical in fandom based RPs isn't really that big a deal. They're generally one of those just for fun, critique free spaces Neshomeh mentioned in her response to this topic.

Now, just because I said something shouldn't be a banable offense, that doesn't mean there shouldn't be consequences for it in some cases. It's just that those consequences will be social consequences, like a loss of reputation, or, say, not getting asked to beta stuff anymore.

I prefer, however, that this loss of reputation not happen completely out of the public eye. If someone's a super-lazy beta, for example, the solution isn't to whine to all your friends about it and never say anything on the Board, especially if you never tell this person what you think of them. I'm not saying we can't discuss this sort of stuff in private, I'm just saying that it'd be much better if there were some indication of these collective opinions on the record.

There's another thing I think we should think about as far as our collective behavior, and that's what happens to missions after they're been posted. Missions don't usually get very many responses (usually it's a small one digit number), so it's rather hard to tell if they're being read at all. Some of this might be that the chat-dwelling parts of the PPC get a lot of their acknowledgements in chat, so you don't see them on the Board, but that doesn't seem like the whole story.

I suspect that part of it is that we don't have a technical or cultural equivalent to things like the Kudos button on AO3. That is, there's no way to express a vague sense of appreciation or "Well, I like it, but I don't have any detailed thoughts", as opposed to leaving a full review. Does anyone have any suggestions for an appropriate way to do that sort of thing here?

On a related topic, I've noticed that sometimes, missions get a bit long in a tedious way, which makes them less fun to read and review. There's no rule that says you have to get all the charges or mission the whole fic. In fact, you often shouldn't. (This point could just be a case of individual writing styles and tastes differing, though)

- Tomash

P. S. I think this puts me into the very small group of people that've replied to all four subthreads. Is there a prize?

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