Pluvia said:
That's a great article. It even highlights more harrassment of women in gaming (what has Anita Sarkeesian have to do with Gamergate too? Oh right nothing, yet they keep on bringing her up) for no good reason.
Anyway even though it never came out until a week later, you should've mentioned it because it highlights the fact that no one involved with the Zoe Quinn abuse bothered (or more likely, cared) to check if the accusations were real. It wasn't until they got a bit more attention and others checked if their claims were real that it came to light.
Of course the smokescreen was quickly put up to try and make it look like it was about ethics in journalism, despite even that spawning from a review that never existed.
Serious question: does any of that actually matter to the question of ethics in journalism?
If ethics in journalism is being used as a smokescreen, does it make it any less important of an issue?
Is there some rule that says we can only discuss either ethics in journalism or the harassment of people in the gaming community?
What exactly is stopping them both from being discussed and considered?
They are obviously important issues to non-insignificant portions of the gaming community, so why exactly shouldn't we be discussing them like they are, rather than saying one is just a smoke screen or a distraction or a non-issue?
Do you want to talk about harassment? I'll talk about harassment with you. It's a problem. We have no-name assholes who are making death-threats and putting out private information because they don't like someone. That's some sick shit and it needs to be stopped.
We have members of the press 'jokingly' supporting bullying and gloating about it in the public sphere. That's some sick shit and it needs to be stopped.
We can't let people make our community toxic. We have to take steps to identify it, contain it, and penultimately nullify it while maintaining our own level-headedness and fairness.
It's going to be a challenge, and it's not going to happen overnight, but why shouldn't we?
And why the hell shouldn't we address the serious breach of ethics that's going on in the media? Have you been paying any attention to them? Beyond just the abuse that we've had going around on twitter and the very real censorship that is hitting as close to home as
The Escapist itself we have the long history of shady practices in organizations like IGN. Games as a medium are growing up, and that means that it's more important than ever to have these kinds of discussions as our medium interacts more and more with the wider culture.
I don't see the issues in the same sort of natural dichotomy many seem to. They both need attention and discussion.