Neogaf is still a public forum, and as such your activities aren't private.
Uh... hmmmmm... not really
Neogaf is still a public forum, and as such your activities aren't private.
I dunno, I don't particularly disagree with either of my bans, it's just my second was doubled with no reason given, felt kind of rude.I still don't agree with 2/3 bans I've gotten, but I just took the L and let it go.
You go out in public, and yell out "God damn those *racial slurs*"
You get arressted.
The papers don't say "Sunflower was arrested" and leave it at that, they generally say why. Neogaf is still a public forum, and as such your activities aren't private. What's the difference here?
It is just my opinion, obviously I'm not the one running the forums. It wasn't clarified but it seemed like to users that you used whatever profits gained from running neogaf to help fund your trip.
My thing was going "well that seems frivolous, as the admin shouldn't he spend that money back on the forums if that was where it was gained?"
But again, that was an initial assumption. It may be wrong and my arguement is unfounded.
I didn't mean to upset anyone v_v
They're on the internet, this is a public forum that anyone can look at. Members can view your post history. That's public.Uh... hmmmmm... not really
So ban discussions on the topic? What discussion does there need to be when it says why someone got banned? It either is or it isn't, and the only discussion on WHY/WHYNOT should be up to the mods. There's nothing wrong with knowing why someone got banned. It's basically a "don't do this" for everyone.Because discussions start getting bogged down in posting histories, previous bans and then people want to constantly debate whether something is bannable material even though I'm sure some bans are literally people already on the brink. It's not up to us, that's the main message you should just understand.
Yeah, SA has a ban reason for exactly that purpose. When you get banned you get a message saying why. Just make that public and put it in a list.A lot of users aren't banned for single posts but a continued attitude. Even linking to a single post wouldn't put it in perspective. That's why the mods have discussions and come to agreements.
This is a private forum that is open to almost anyoneYou go out in public, and yell out "God damn those *racial slurs*"
You get arressted.
The papers don't say "Sunflower was arrested" and leave it at that, they generally say why. Neogaf is still a public forum, and as such your activities aren't private. What's the difference here?
Well considering that's not the official reason they got banned (could be not sure myself yet) doesn't matter how much sense it makes
So ban discussions on the topic? What discussion does there need to be when it says why someone got banned? It either is or it isn't, and the only discussion on WHY/WHYNOT should be up to the mods. There's nothing wrong with knowing why someone got banned. It's basically a "don't do this" for everyone.
Guy literally passed on a million dollar offer (I forget the exact number) just to keep this site away from becoming a conglomerate-owned outpost. If the argument is to be made that he doesn't care about the site or is not using any profits gained to improve or maintain the experience, you should at least look into the recent history of developments.But again, that was an initial assumption. It may be wrong and my arguement is unfounded.
Doesn't matter if he payed for it with the golden eggs he shits, that's all irrelevant to the way the site is run or kept up to snuff, since we're entitled to literally nothing enhancing as it's a completely free experience. If you think otherwise, you have to be kidding yourself.Not to speak for evil but you don't know how much he puts into GAF or how long he saved for his trip or anything
I believe they're taking steps in that direction, which we should see when they push out the major redesign sometime in the near future. That'll be fun for everyone when it happens.So this is vbulletin, I always thought it was built from scratch.
Some of these bans are a joke and it's just a shame to see a number of good posters go grey with people grouping up and celebrating it.
When banning will naturally be EXTREMELY inconsistent, I would appreciate the decisions to be in relation to the overall quality of the posters in question.
If I'm a doctor I will naturally receive many patients complaining about a headache. What do I do? I'll give them medicine for the headache. IF, a person comes three times in a row complaining about a headache, what do I do? I will know there's likely something more to it and will research it further. This example can be applied to a forum environment.
Don't go after mistakes, because you can't catch them all - go for the people.
A few of the bans were very tongue-in-cheek and would have gone unnoticed 99,99% of the time. Similarly, in football/soccer or any other sport, sometimes you might as a referee rule out a clear-cut goal. So in this comparison how do you prevent these mistakes? You get video cameras to ensure the decision is correct.
This ban spree somehow reminded me of this one from a few weeks back.
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?p=42206836&highlight=#post42206836
An inside joke, in most cases harmless. ( Though I do agree it was poorly worded ) Yet this time? A _PERMA_ban. Permanent over that? REALLY? While you can of course lean to your own interpretation in the most obvious scenarios of ignorance and such, sometimes you have to look further to the person's post history and general input.
TL;DR: It would be nice if the person banning would review the whole picture first and not randomly ban one when the 'time is right'. Certain practices are inevitable thus you go for the main offenders.
Making everything a public spectacle invites gossip and constant questioning of the administration's decisions, which derails threads more than the idiot who got banned in the first place probably did.
Loss.Also, what's "the L"?
They're on the internet, this is a public forum that anyone can look at. Members can view your post history. That's public.
There likely would have been less "Head nod"-style gifs posted though, which appeared to get a number of people banned. The result ended up being a bunch more creepers seeing photos of people that likely didn't want to be seen.
Again, not saying Sentry should be axed. I just don't think that's the way to go when condemning something.
A lot of users aren't banned for single posts but a continued attitude. Even linking to a single post wouldn't put it in perspective. That's why the mods have discussions and come to agreements.
Perhaps linking to the post with a tag "REPEAT OFFENSIVE JOKES ABOUT SENSITIVE SUBJECTS" or "REPEATEDLY MADE SAME UNFUNNY COMMENT OVER MANY THREADS" would illustrate what posts can be tipping points.
Also I've decided the comments should be in caps because they convey a sense of power.
Could you define creeper? What makes someone a creeper? Could you specifically name the creepers in that thread?
Problem is it's oftentimes an accumulation of posts that lead someone to get banned, not just a single post, so adding a 'user was banned for this' wouldn't always work and thus be counterproductive. I do agree with the differentiating between suspensions and perm-bans, though.The ideal system in my eyes would be somehow differentiating between permabans and suspensions and maybe offering a link to the offending post with a "USER WAS BANNED FOR THIS POST REASON: BECAUSE REASONS" tag at the end so people know what not to do. Doesn't reveal for how long to avoid arguments, but let's people know what they shouldn't do and whether or not they're gone for good.
What we should do is remove member/banned status altogether so there's no way of knowing when someone gets banned. They just stop posting.
Making everything a public spectacle invites gossip and constant questioning of the administration's decisions, which derails threads more than the idiot who got banned in the first place probably did.
What we should do is remove member/banned status altogether so there's no way of knowing when someone gets banned. They just stop posting.
Or do the opposite and have a 'currently banned members' part just below the who's online bit.
Hyuk hyuk hyuk.
The spectacle came from the community, as a byproduct of the stickied threads. Perhaps they were there as an example or just as placeholders for a more collected review.Didn't bish make a huge public spectacle with the whole countdown thing?
The spectacle came from the community, as a byproduct of the stickied threads. Perhaps they were there as an example or just as placeholders for a more collected review.
What we should do is remove member/banned status altogether so there's no way of knowing when someone gets banned. They just stop posting.
Look for grayed out names.Or do the opposite and have a 'currently banned members' part just below the who's online bit.
Hyuk hyuk hyuk.
But what if it's a laundry list of shit? I mean you can generally figure out for yourself if you've been posting like a douche lately and need to pull back on some stuff, especially if you've already eaten a ban.
This ban spree somehow reminded me of this one from a few weeks back.
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?p=42206836&highlight=#post42206836
Then as members (even me junior), it is our responsibilities to be mature and not turn into a pack of hyenas tearing apart the latest carcasses.Completely contradicting the message of "we don't want banning to be a public spectacle".
Then as members (even me junior), it is our responsibliities to be mature and not turn into a pack of hyenas tearing apart the lastest carcasses.
Perhaps a simple standard explanation saying how they were "REPEAT OFFENDERS ON PROBATION" or something to that effect. Or maybe even instead if linking to a post have the reason be embedded in their profile, with the banned/suspended tag linked there as well.
Yes that was SomethingAwful and it was called "hellbanning"I seem to remember a forum (I don't know if it was here), where banned users didn't know they were banned and continued posting happily, but no one could see their posts.
Look for grayed out names.
You're missing the point somehow.
I seem to remember a forum (I don't know if it was here), where banned users didn't know they were banned and continued posting happily, but no one could see their posts.
There is hope for the futureThen forgive me for my ignorance. I just see it as "policy." Whatever that is, it is not my role to decide; I just try to contribute.
What we should do is remove member/banned status altogether so there's no way of knowing when someone gets banned. They just stop posting.
This sounds brilliant.
Although I'd say that that it'd be nice to know if the bans are perm or not. Like with Dennis, he's one of my favorite posters. It's he gone forever?![]()
Someone want to explain this to me? I've read the thread, and I must be missing something.
From what I know: He had 2 accounts, gave up his schtick, and for breaking a bunch of TOS rules was given ban immunity.
What am I missing here?
I seem to remember a forum (I don't know if it was here), where banned users didn't know they were banned and continued posting happily, but no one could see their posts.
This puts too much strain on a server and while it's cute, it's not sustainable. Especially as the poster can then "Troll" by bumping old threads mysteriously.
Hellbanning is a practice used by some online community managers for protecting a community against Internet trolls. The practice involves making a user invisible to all other users. From the hellbanned user's perspective, however, they seem to be participating normally in the community. The purpose of hellbanning is to make it impossible for other users to respond to a particular user by rendering their contributions invisible and thereby enforcing the community best practice of "not feeding trolls".I'd let banned members keep posting.
It's just that their posts remain hidden/blocked from other users.
So they're in a special type of hell where nobody knows they exist.
Kind of like my current GAF existence.
There is hope for the future
You kinda had to be there, GAF was a more lenient place back then moderation wise. Though where did you read the thread?
I seem to remember a forum (I don't know if it was here), where banned users didn't know they were banned and continued posting happily, but no one could see their posts.
They're on the internet, this is a public forum that anyone can look at. Members can view your post history. That's public.