Consumerium:Contributor: Difference between revisions

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The reason for this definition is to put Contributors on a higher plane than ordinary end users in the [[Consumerium License]], and make them count for more in a [[consensus]] than someone who just walks in off the street and may be a [[mole]].
The reason for this definition is to put Contributors on a higher plane than ordinary end users in the [[Consumerium License]], and make them count for more in a [[consensus]] than someone who just walks in off the street and may be a [[mole]].
There are strong reasons to prefer recruiting those who are considered, or who act as, [[trolls]] in other internet forums ([[Meatball Wiki]], [[Meta-Wikipedia]] and [[Wikipedia]] itself).  Often, the people labelled troll are the most disciplined and high-integrity contributors, and those who call them that are the stupidest.  This is not a tautology, quite, although trolls revel in saying it is.  An illustrative case is that of Bill Palmer, who wrote in mid-1999 of an exchange where [[trollishness]] was perhaps mutually observed:
:"Instead of troubling himself with attempting
a reasoned refutation of my assertions, he posted
some peevish remarks directed at me as a person
rather than at the many ideas in my article.
:In the course of his unfriendly comments, he said
something that made it clear he was accusing me of
being a troll.  In fact, he actually used the term
"troll" as he did this.
:That's right.  Me, Bill Palmer, "a troll"!
:The person who has posted over 6,000 articles,
most by far to generally appropriate newsgroup
forums and has done so proudly under his own name
every time. 
:The net writer who has generated follow-up from many
thousands of DIFFERENT readers and who has written a
significant percentage of the best known original Usenet
articles of the past few years.
:The proud owner of "Dejamountain", the only personal
archive famous by its own name.
:My critic's style of unjust name-calling bothers me
because it smacks of witch hunting, certainly so when
we throw all reason out the window and start applying
vague criteria defining "trolls" and "trolling" to
suit our own whims by unfairly branding someone who
rubs our nose out joint with his or her controversial
(but on-topic) articles.
:Further, a few months back when I posted another
original article in a different newsgroup someone
did in fact call me a troll then too.  I thought
at the time that the epithet was incredibly
unreasonable and I still think that."
- http://xahlee.org/Netiquette_dir/_/to_catch_a_troll.txt
In order to avoid such debates, it would be ideal to simply call every '''Contributor''' a "[[troll]]" as a condition of editing.  That is, if you are not willing to cheerfully embrace the label and role of the troll, you should not edit here!  That would be an appropriate attitude filter and would remove much [[psychiatry]] in advance.
Anonymous user