Rocket pendulum fallacy, nzjrs.
God bless that man, i miss his idea sharing.
After Silverstone someone tried a bit of an opposite approach and made a seperate thread to discuss the 'what' and 'how' of the incident without going into the "who was at fault" question and it still ended up being discussed because the lines between what was ok and what wasn't were very blurred and the thread was locked eventually.Wouter wrote: ↑18 Sep 2021, 15:24On another very busy F1 forum, I saw that during the race a new topic was immediately opened in which people could discuss the crash between Lewis and Max.
As a result, the race topic remained calm and there was talk about what was happening with the other 17 drivers at that moment. That has remained the case after that.
It might be an idea to do the same here, should something bad happen again (which I'm sure will). See if that works here too.
I'm not really sure how "collecting downvotes" can be a thing? What's the point? The only result will be that the mods will light an additional spotlight towards that person.Big Tea wrote: ↑18 Sep 2021, 10:47Some posters seem to 'collect' downvotes and it would be just what some are seeking.
Also, it is personal perception what is trolling, so a downvote counts if I (or anyone else) do it, but if it takes a number of votes to produce any result it would remove individual preference and also prevent it being used as a 'weapon' against a poster maliciously.
I may feel something is bad, while it is quite acceptable to most others, or the reverse could be true.
One persons preference and action would have no impact, but if (say) 6 people thought it malicious, excluding the poster from that thread would break the chain, but if it was an innocent misunderstanding or mis-interpreted it would have no lasting effect on the poster or on that poster in other threads.
There would be the 'Ah, him again' effect and people would be in no doubt,- Troll: Do not feed
A small set of questions about the regs here before a user's first post might help.cooken wrote: ↑18 Sep 2021, 14:22This is a technical forum right? Is it possible to establish minimum requirements for new users? For example:
Upon joining, the user has to read selected portions of the regs (maybe emphasis on defending and overtaking clauses) as well as a brief case study review and pass a short quiz before being allowed to post. It would of course be fairly easy and give infinite redos until passing. This would at least instill a basic familiarity of the rules and how they are and have been enforced.
A lot of the vitreol surrounds racing incidents, and it is painfully apparent that a large chunk of participants have a poor grasp of the rules and how/when they apply.
Maybe instead of a quiz there could be a stickied post or something, with links to the regs and example videos.
PS - I realize this is maybe impractical but hey maybe it triggers a better idea from someone else.
I have always been a supporter of shorter topical threads. These extremely long threads for me are just a mess, inducing the problem that people don't care to look back in the thread (I mean, who can be bothered reading 10 pages back before posting, when what he posts might have even been posted 11 pages back)...Wouter wrote: ↑18 Sep 2021, 15:24On another very busy F1 forum, I saw that during the race a new topic was immediately opened in which people could discuss the crash between Lewis and Max.
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It might be an idea to do the same here, should something bad happen again (which I'm sure will). See if that works here too.
I don't know if you have the ability to search user and/or moderated deleted posts, but I know on a few occasions problematic users have said something along the lines of "keep them coming, or ""I know I'm getting to you/them".
I can assure you that a moderator, I don't know about every moderator, will certainly look at a poster's post history.dans79 wrote: ↑19 Sep 2021, 15:47I don't know if you have the ability to search user and/or moderated deleted posts, but I know on a few occasions problematic users have said something along the lines of "keep them coming, or ""I know I'm getting to you/them".
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One way I think you might be able to handle problematic posts, is to allow multiple users to report them. Currently once one person reports a post no other users can.
Allowing multiple people to report a post, would give the moderators more points of view to base their decisions on, while still giving them the final say.
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If the moderators don't take into account a posters history (it doesn't seem that they do), then reporting posts is of a lot less value in my opinion.
I have received serious threats of violence already via PM. I don't know if the poster is still around so as far as I am concerned my safety can be threatened again. So I implore posters to be careful what is said. We have a new breed of poster afoot. Your safety may be at risk.NathanOlder wrote: ↑15 Sep 2021, 14:38Yeah , I too fall in to the trap far too often! With such a large amount of constant antagonising posts, the race and team threads just fall down completely.Diesel wrote: ↑15 Sep 2021, 10:30I think sadly things won't change. I'll be the first to admit I can't help but get sucked in to it. As others have said a lot of the posts are made intentially to antagonise people and it works. A more recent trend is for things to escalate beyond the race threads and even this site, which is quite scary really.
Totally agree on allowing multiple people to report a post. I think it would be helpful.dans79 wrote: ↑19 Sep 2021, 15:47I don't know if you have the ability to search user and/or moderated deleted posts, but I know on a few occasions problematic users have said something along the lines of "keep them coming, or ""I know I'm getting to you/them".
As i read it, that's the problematic users taking pride in the fact they irritating other users enough to garner downvotes.
One way I think you might be able to handle problematic posts, is to allow multiple users to report them. Currently once one person reports a post no other users can.
Allowing multiple people to report a post, would give the moderators more points of view to base their decisions on, while still giving them the final say.
I am still however of the firm believe that the moderation staff must crack down harder on those who are constantly making passive aggressive and trolling posts. As far as I'm concerned that is the root of the problem. People will only tolerate so much before they retaliate, and when people retaliate that's when you end up with a mess of a thread that needs cleaned up.
Just last night I reported such a post, and stated it was nothing more than a trolling post looking for a hostile response. That report was closed and nothing was done. I logged in this morning, and sure enough it got one response with a negative tone, and another thats was definitely hostile/personal.
I've had more private conversations than I care to count about if reporting posts is worth it. If the moderators don't take into account a posters history (it doesn't seem that they do), then reporting posts is of a lot less value in my opinion. It's not hard to craft a post that on its own seems benign, but when read in the context of previous posts, it becomes much easier to see motive/intent/agenda.
Fair question, what does my proposal add that you can't do through downvoting or reporting a post? Downvoting is against a particular post and often it doesn't feel appropriate to single out an individual when it is a series of posts that have taken the thread off-topic or in to a ying-yang argument. In these cases, it takes two-to-tango. It is the reaction of multiple members that results in the thread becoming boring or worse, toxic.Steven wrote: ↑18 Sep 2021, 10:34Good to see a proposal to improve this!dave kumar wrote: ↑16 Sep 2021, 01:20Rather than flag a post as ying-yang (as it's never one post that is responsible), members would be able to flag a thread as having entered a ying-yang state. If enough members flag a thread in a given time period, we cross a threshold or reach a quorum. Crossing the threshold may simply result in a change in the icon of the thread / background colour when viewing the thread, to warn potential readers and posters that we are entering ying-yang territory. Entering ying-yang state could also be used to bring the thread to the attention of the moderators who may wish to take further action.
But, why wouldn't downvotes work for trolling? I mean, that was part of the point, even though you could perhaps argue that trolling could be reported instead.
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If you have suspicions about sock puppet accounts DM the mods, I'm sure they will just delete them.
I never noticed that there are sock puppet accounts here.