Subject: doctorlit's thoughts continue.
Author:
Posted on: 2017-04-28 05:07:00 UTC

Assuming authority: A long time ago (and it's far too close to bedtime to search for it), Neshomeh said something along the lines that even if permission givers don't have any official authority in this community, they still lead by example. This is unavoidable in any situation where one human has been doing something longer than another. (Imagine if, say, the PPC had never developed into a community, and the last three months' worth of newbies had happened across the deleted Original Series in 2017, and tried start a writing community around it. How would they even go about it? Actually, don't imagine, because now I'm starting to make an AU in my mind . . .) And in spite of leading by example, they still don't have official authority; if anyone here started trying to "take over," they would be summarily ignored, and we would all continue doing as we've been doing. The only punishment necessary would be the lack of trust and respect that individual had engendered for themselves. Moving on to the matter of "staking claims:" This does get a little difficult in a mass multiplayer setting, doesn't it? On the one hand, one person shouldn't be locking up design and development space from the rest of the community, other than their own characters and plot arcs. On the other hand, it would suck for an element to get changed by one author when another author was in the midst of working something that said something else . . . Full disclosure: I'm currently terrified that someone is going to name the head Flower of the Cafeteria before I can get a story draft I'm working on through beta stages to publish, because my story literally hinges on that Flower being the kind of Flower he is. (For the record, I did ask Vixenmage, the only other current author with Cafeteria characters, for permission before going forward with the story.) Ultimately, as another poster somewhere above or below said, if you're planning something in the setting, either do it, or don't complain. But please no one beat me to the Cafeteria head. Again, I don't think a formal punishment is necessary (assuming the claim-staking didn't devolve into bullying); the setting, and its other creators, will steam-roll past the offender.

Oldbie speak: I guess I covered a bit of this in the above section. I'll admit that I'm typically a bit mistrustful of newbies until I've gotten to know them for a while. But I've also seen times when (relative) newbies have joined in to debates, games, discussions, RPs, etc. with energy and strong will. I think we are quicker to chastise newbies when they do something out of line, but that's partly a form of showing our newest members the ropes of the community in which they find themselves. I've also seen oldbies talk each other down when one crossed the line. Ultimately, it's a matter of each of us reading the words/actions being said/done, and not the name behind them, and responding with an appropriate reply.

—doctorlit noticed earlier today that he passed over section 2. He will return to that next time he has time to type.

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