MarsAtlas said:
SecondPrize said:
MarsAtlas said:
SecondPrize said:
Actual harassment isn't hard to archive when one finds it. Why would you believe it without seeing any?
Ocaam's Razor. Whats more likely, a conspiracy to make Reddit an SJW hugbox that somehow doesn't have a problem with subreddits dedicated to the same thing, just under a different name (eg: Shit Niggers Say was shut down, but Coontowm, among others, still persists) or perhaps that the five subs in question that are all mean-spirited in natured violated some new rules? Besides, on FPH they were posting personal details about imgur staff. Thats a pretty good basis to shut them down.
You apply the razor in situations where one cannot be sure, not when one party claims something but is light on evidence.
And this is one of those situations. After all, "harassment" on the internet, as a definition, nowadays has been stretched wider than a fisherman's epic catch of the century that they conveniently left in the ocean. I can right now link screencaps of people just generally being assholes, making statements that could be taken as threats, and just outright making threats and there will be more than just one or two people who will say that that isn't harassment. There are people here who will say that posting somebody's personal information on a message and implicitly encouraging people to go use this personal information to bother people is not harassment. Thats literally what Fat People Hate was doing.
And countless other subreddits that people can point to as well. Hell, off the top of my head, gamerghazi was a notorious hub of that sort of shit, as is a number of the ones listed earlier in the thread like Coontown. As others have pointed out, many times now, it isn't that they were enforcing a policy, the problem was that it was a nuclear response to individuals accused of doing wrong, that it was an unevenly applied nuclear response as not every subreddit guilty of that behavior got nuked, and that the site itself grew based upon the idea of free speech and the sudden nuking of subreddits like that seems to spit in the face of that sort of foundation.
The first thing you'd have to demonstrate for your claim to have any standing is that the harassment was subreddit-wide, the standard channels were reached out to deal with it and that still nothing was done. Considering both the simultaneous nature of the closings and the general surprise of them to the userbase though, I kinda doubt that was the case. Since it most likely was not, we now have a situation where some subreddits are treated more harshly then others for no discernible reason (since the stated one is inconsistent with the actions seen), which not surprisingly is a bit part of the fuel driving the backlash against that decision.
Also I imagine part of it was based on the general logical flaw of damning a group for the actions of a select few. People don't like seeing that, even applied to assholes. It tends to continue to happen over and over if not called out after all.
Finally, I find it sort of funny to hear complaint about the definition of harassment. Considering the definition itself has been used to describe anything from open threats to simply saying "I don't agree", not surprised it is so hard to pin down the meaning. But I am willing to bet the definition there is far far more rarely denied to actual examples of aggressive intimidation or attacks compared to the numerous times the word has been used to describe things it isn't such as disagreement or insult. Sadly though, that is what happens when a word is used so freely for the emotional impact it has, the word simply loses the impact and degenerates, causing the definition to be more and more loose. If you really want the word to have real meaning again, I'd suggest holding people accountable when they misuse it or use it for cheap emotional apeals. Words have meanings, but only if the meaning is consistent. Otherwise, well, you see what happens. No one listens to the boy who cries harassment anymore.
As for the one your refer to who say that "posting somebody's personal information on a message and implicitly encouraging people to go use this personal information to bother people is not harassment", I am curious. Was that an honest claim being made there? I can't think of anyone who'd say that wasn't harassment, if indeed that was the proper description to a given situation. Was it just a misrepresentation of other opinions or arguments from other topics shoehorned into this one to try to demonstrate the point? Seems a bit of a reach for that intent. Was it just a completely manufactured claim for hyperbole sake? Sort of an odd claim to make if so. I am sort of curious though who you are referencing, as that sound very damning of them.
captcha: spread the net
Funny, though I think arguing a more narrow definition of the term, preferably something that is actually relevant to how it applies in legal terms and most common usage for the last couple centuries would actually shrink that net a little.