aelf
Ashen One
Should have browsed this forum earlier and found this thread. Some questions have been bugging me, and I hope I can get some answers here.
1) Is saying that someone is flaming or trolling in a thread considered a flame/troll itself? This seems to have happened.
I get that it might be unnecessary since there is a report function, but in a discussion the report function doesn't tell the other poster that his/her points are invalid because he/she is doing nothing more than flaming/trolling. Surely to say that "I don't think you have a point here because you're really just flaming/trolling" is not out of line?
2) Is there any standard for deciding whether a post is a flame/troll?
I am asking because sometimes content that appears to be obviously trying to flame/troll passes the test, but another that is unclear gets infracted. Clearly, the issue is with the specific application of the rules, which is naturally uncodified, but which probably has some informal standards.
For one, shouldn't the intent of the poster help make the decision? It's not hard to see when someone's intending to offend.
1) Is saying that someone is flaming or trolling in a thread considered a flame/troll itself? This seems to have happened.
I get that it might be unnecessary since there is a report function, but in a discussion the report function doesn't tell the other poster that his/her points are invalid because he/she is doing nothing more than flaming/trolling. Surely to say that "I don't think you have a point here because you're really just flaming/trolling" is not out of line?
2) Is there any standard for deciding whether a post is a flame/troll?
I am asking because sometimes content that appears to be obviously trying to flame/troll passes the test, but another that is unclear gets infracted. Clearly, the issue is with the specific application of the rules, which is naturally uncodified, but which probably has some informal standards.
For one, shouldn't the intent of the poster help make the decision? It's not hard to see when someone's intending to offend.