Subject: More thoughts.
Author:
Posted on: 2017-04-27 19:06:00 UTC
On Coordinating in Private
I agree with Phobos on this: it depends on the intent. Wanting to have the support of your friends in a difficult moment is one thing. Ganging up on someone to shut them up is another.
It also personally gets my back up when people who hardly ever post on the Board pop up out of nowhere to join in criticizing someone. That, to me, is a serious red flag signalling collusion with malign intent.
On Assuming Authority
I've seen people acting entitled—to feedback, mostly—but I'm not sure I've seen anyone issue demands on the basis of imaginary authority. Can we have an example?
I do think people are entitled to a say when it comes to bits of the PPC into which they've put lots of time and effort. That's just polite.
However, I also think you have to actively maintain your stake or give it up. I think you can expect people to respect your claims as long as you're active in the community, but you can't expect people to wait for you forever if you've drifted away. When it comes to fic claims, developments on a storyline, or other things of that nature, at some point you have to nut up or shut up.
On Argument from Oldbie
a) I agree with Phobos on this one. I've definitely seen people say things to the effect of "I've been down this road before and had X experience, so trust me when I say Y," which I think is perfectly valid even if it doesn't necessarily make them right about the present case. I can't say I've ever seen a completely unqualified "I've been here longer than you, therefore I am right and you should do what I say without question."
b) I've got a couple of quotes that sum up how I feel about this. "Younger warriors are wise to listen to older ones. They've lived." "Keep an open mind, but not so open that your brain falls out."
In other words, it's probably smart to give some weight to the opinions of people who have a lot of experience with the thing under discussion, but it's never a good idea to turn off your critical thinking engine. If you do, it's not the oldbies' fault.
c) This is actually a serious concern, but I'm not too worried about it. First of all, the long-time members mostly get along with each other, and that's because of mutual respect and trust built up over years of association. We've written together, debated together, created together, played together, and worked hard together for years, and we've managed not to screw it up. So, like, if someone has been around a long time, it's pretty much because they care about this place and are a good person? People who don't care and aren't nice tend not to last.
I get that these close bonds between oldbies can make us appear as an impenetrable clique to newbies, but frankly, that's just too bad. I'm not going to stop liking and associating with my friends of the past five years or more. You can become one yourself, though, if you care and are nice to be around. "Oldbie" is not actually an impenetrable clique, it's something you achieve by being around and participating positively without ticking people off all the time.
Cases in point: People assumed I was a PG long before I actually became one, simply because I was active on the Board and I made an effort to know what I was talking about and then to help out when newer people had questions. People also lumped Phobos in with the oldbies almost immediately after he joined, because he knew me and because he made an effort to know what he was doing and then acted like it. Iximaz was voted a PG after, what, a year? because she showed enthusiasm and made an effort to be knowledgeable and do well.
You can, too. And then, if one or another of us gets into trouble, you can help put us back in our place.
d) This also is a serious concern, and the one I think we can actually do the most about. See Battlefield Mentality and Jumping to Conclusions. And then don't do those things. {= )
Splitting the Community
Ehhhh, there are decisions and then there are decisions. Not everything needs the full participation of the whole community. I'm thinking mostly of the wiki here, because that's where I have the most experience, but it applies to other spaces, too. Stuff like "hey, can I add a link I think is relevant to this page?" is probably okay to discuss on the article's talk page. The people most likely to respond there are also the people most likely to respond on the Board, because they're the only ones who actually care about the minutiae that much. {= P
Even a lot of the stuff I've gotten up to over there, when it changes the format but not the content, I haven't always brought up on the Board, because honestly, nobody cares as long as they can get the information they want. (This, from what I can tell, is mostly information about badfics, particularly the Legendary ones. {= P ) And then when it comes to content, as long as I'm adding and not removing it, that is something anyone can do as long as the content they're adding isn't spam or other garbage.
Things that may affect the perception of the PPC as a whole, though, or broadly change what content is available in what way, or broadly affect content that does not belong to me, I have brought up on the Board. (And mostly found that most people don't care, but I still do it.)
So I really think it's a matter of intent and degree.
Also, as someone else pointed out, a space can be available to everyone, but people will still self-select themselves out of it. Not everybody cares about the wiki; not everyone likes a live chat; not everyone enjoys RP or Cards Against HQ or Minecraft or whatever else you care to name that takes PPCers to other platforms. As long as what you're doing only has repercussions in that space, you're probably fine. If the repercussions grow broader, you should probably take it to a broader platform. The Board is the broadest platform. This is simple logic.
I'll reiterate, though, that if you don't regularly participate on the Board, but then pop up just to harangue someone, that's really not cool. {= /
~Neshomeh doesn't understand why the Citrus Scale page is so popular, with the second-highest number of views—highest after the main page—in the last four weeks. O.o