I've had conversations with people that seem to think that anonymity means that people are more prone to lie. I'm not sure this is true, I'd be surprised if it were true here, at Hubski. I think it's the opposite. When you know that your neighbor, mom, sister, former classmates etc can all see what you are saying and associate it with you, you're more likely to lie and to say that which is socially acceptable. I think in a community where anonymity exists we tend to get more honesty (sometimes brutal honesty) from people. Many of us have usernames here that can easily be traced to our real names (myself included) but the anonymity is just enough to allow me to speak freely. I agree with Chris Poole that we could potentially lose something extremely valuable if anonymity were to be tossed aside.
There are three kinds of anonymity: - total anonymity. This is what you get at 4chan. You post something, nobody knows where it's from. - transitory anonymity. This is a blog comment with a throwaway name, or a Youtube comment. You can own your comments, but there's no reputation, there's no accountability. - conditional anonymity. This is what you get at Hubski, at Reddit, at eBay. You are anonymous, but your alias is not. There are consequences to your persona for misbehavior. There's a bifurcation between your "real life" and your "internet life" that forms a Chinese Wall between the two, preventing blowback from one injuring the other, but you are vulnerable to attack. moot is a firm believer in total anonymity because his head is completely up his ass. It's not entirely his fault; while most people's parents would have made them go to school and socialize with other humans, moot's mom let him set up 4chan in his basement. Nonetheless, he's now a grown human being that really ought to brush up on the insanely hurtful shit done in his name. There are no experts in the field that find total anonymity to be anything but hurtful to discourse. People who want to do good want the conditional anonymity - being the "man behind the mask" is enough. People who want to do bad want total anonymity - you want to make sure that nothing you ever say or do will get back to you. Total anonymity is a bank robber. Conditional anonymity is a "caped crusader" - or a serial killer like Zodiac or the Night Stalker. Total anonymity has its place, but "large online communities" ain't it. This has been abundantly clear since the days of Usenet. "The mob is man voluntarily descending to the nature of the beast. Its fit hour of activity is night. Its actions are insane like its whole constitution. It persecutes a principle; it would whip a right; it would tar and feather justice, by inflicting fire and outrage upon the houses and persons of those who have these. It resembles the prank of boys, who run with fire-engines to put out the ruddy aurora streaming to the stars".
- Ralph Waldo Emerson, Selected Essays and Lectures, Essay III, "Compensation"
Dude, I'll warn you once. Don't get all 'citation needed' in a conversation someone else pointed out to you that happened a month ago. Smiley faces don't hide shit. I will fuck you up. So let's start over again, as if this were a choose-your-own-adventure book. "You are traipsing through an online community to show off your coding project. You encounter someone who professes to have an understanding of the basis of your design. Do you: A) Ask him to elaborate so that you might learn something? or B) Snipe at his month-old statements in an attempt to find a reason to discount what he has to say?"
"inflammatory" implies you have a stake in the matter. You don't. You can't be "inflamed" by something that happened a month before you even got here that has nothing to do with you. On the other hand, going through point-by-point and attacking the delivery (rather than the content) of a message is inflammatory as fuck. I'm finding little reason to continue talking to you.
I find this an interesting piece, as it is one of the more important aspects of online communities that hubski has to deal with. What I think is that anonymity lends itself to more freedom, which has the implications that yes, there are more people lying than if there was no anonymity, but more people telling the truth too. I think we have a fair balance here, where it is completely possible to stay anonymous but if you don't mind your doxing profile that is equally possible. At the same time I don't want to think about the consequences of my writings. It shouldn't limit or change what I want to say.