Korjaukset

Text from Margo__ - English

  • How to constrain online abuse

  • Lots of people consider online forums and social nets are unsafe and bitchier places and don’t feel they could have a civil and respectful conversation here.
  • Except that online abuse is a problem for ordinary users it is a genuine commercial treat for big corporate players, such as Twitter, Instagram and online publishers.
  • They reliant on people spending more and more time online, but few users and fewer advertisers enjoy being among furious people spoiling for a fight.
  • The way of using censorship could inherently bring to creation of bland, beige online spaces where free speech goes to die.
  • The idea of computers being able to judge offensiveness now really doesn’t works outside the movies.
  • The algorithms that can detect threatening patterns of speech have problems with sarcasm, irony and the sheer range of human annoyance.
  • Another approach is to build a system that tend to produce constructive criticism and harmony, opposed to negativity and bulling.
  • In support of this idea at one forum an experiment has been carried on: before posting a comment users must rate two randomly selected comments from others for quality of argument and civility and then rewrite their own comment if they wanted.
  • As a result the personal attacks, name-calling and abuse have gone.
  • It may not deter hardened trolls but evokes the sense of social inhibition we feel in real life when asked to speak before an audience.
  • Another example is Uber taxi’s app’s rating system, which asks passengers and drivers to give each other star-rating.
  • The company doesn’t spell out the results too carefully because passengers go to surprising length to keep a good rating without really understanding why it matters.
  • But invoking sense of being watched isn’t the only way platforms subliminally encourage social behaviour.
  • Few years ago Facebook managers noticed a rush of complains from users about friends posting photo of them that they didn’t like.
  • This complains were invariably rejected because no rules had been broken.
  • Managers tried to saying, “Why don’t you just message the person?”, but people didn’t quite know what to say.
  • So the complainants get a template message to say their friend, explaining how the picture makes them feel and asking politely for its removal.
  • It is a classic example that humans learn by imitation - don’t explain why, just show them how.
  • At recent plans in Facebook is to undermine jihadi propaganda by “organized niceness” like it had been done in one German Neo-Nazi group – it was swamped by messages of inclusivity and tolerance.
  • It is hard to imagine that it could help but just shutting offensive accounts is necessary but not enough.
  • Why not mobilize the vast majority of reasonable human beings to marginalize what is really a tiny but disproportionately noisy minority of extremists?
  • The question is not learned enough but it is obvious that if extremists seek to spread fear and shock, counterspeech might aim to make them look small and ridiculous by using humour and warmth.
  • The interesting fact is that people who had just joined the Twitter or Facebook usually looks what the others had written working out “What should I say?” before post their own comment.
  • The infamous “broken windows” thesis works in net like in all other environments, but much faster: the small incident quickly creates the impression that everything goes like this, and encourages serious problems.

AUTA KORJAAMAAN JOKAINEN LAUSE! - English

  • Otsikko
  • Lause 1
    • Lots of people consider online forums and social nets are unsafe and bitchier places and don’t feel they could have a civil and respectful conversation here.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 1ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 1
  • Lause 2
    • Except that online abuse is a problem for ordinary users it is a genuine commercial treat for big corporate players, such as Twitter, Instagram and online publishers.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 2ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 2
  • Lause 3
    • They reliant on people spending more and more time online, but few users and fewer advertisers enjoy being among furious people spoiling for a fight.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 3ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 3
  • Lause 4
    • The way of using censorship could inherently bring to creation of bland, beige online spaces where free speech goes to die.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 4ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 4
  • Lause 5
  • Lause 6
    • The algorithms that can detect threatening patterns of speech have problems with sarcasm, irony and the sheer range of human annoyance.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 6ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 6
  • Lause 7
    • Another approach is to build a system that tend to produce constructive criticism and harmony, opposed to negativity and bulling.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 7ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 7
  • Lause 8
    • In support of this idea at one forum an experiment has been carried on: before posting a comment users must rate two randomly selected comments from others for quality of argument and civility and then rewrite their own comment if they wanted.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 8ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 8
  • Lause 9
  • Lause 10
    • It may not deter hardened trolls but evokes the sense of social inhibition we feel in real life when asked to speak before an audience.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 10ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 10
  • Lause 11
    • Another example is Uber taxi’s app’s rating system, which asks passengers and drivers to give each other star-rating.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 11ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 11
  • Lause 12
    • The company doesn’t spell out the results too carefully because passengers go to surprising length to keep a good rating without really understanding why it matters.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 12ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 12
  • Lause 13
  • Lause 14
    • Few years ago Facebook managers noticed a rush of complains from users about friends posting photo of them that they didn’t like.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 14ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 14
  • Lause 15
  • Lause 16
    • Managers tried to saying, “Why don’t you just message the person?”, but people didn’t quite know what to say.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 16ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 16
  • Lause 17
    • So the complainants get a template message to say their friend, explaining how the picture makes them feel and asking politely for its removal.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 17ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 17
  • Lause 18
  • Lause 19
    • At recent plans in Facebook is to undermine jihadi propaganda by “organized niceness” like it had been done in one German Neo-Nazi group – it was swamped by messages of inclusivity and tolerance.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 19ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 19
  • Lause 20
  • Lause 21
    • Why not mobilize the vast majority of reasonable human beings to marginalize what is really a tiny but disproportionately noisy minority of extremists?
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 21ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 21
  • Lause 22
    • The question is not learned enough but it is obvious that if extremists seek to spread fear and shock, counterspeech might aim to make them look small and ridiculous by using humour and warmth.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 22ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 22
  • Lause 23
    • The interesting fact is that people who had just joined the Twitter or Facebook usually looks what the others had written working out “What should I say?” before post their own comment.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 23ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 23
  • Lause 24
    • The infamous “broken windows” thesis works in net like in all other environments, but much faster: the small incident quickly creates the impression that everything goes like this, and encourages serious problems.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 24ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 24