QUOTE(Evan Burton @ Apr 8 2007, 01:14 PM) [snapback]99263[/snapback]
In the 9/11 thread, there was an occasion that a member said information that another member had posted was 'disinformation'.
I had believed that the word should not be used with regard to another member, but some people disagree.
Since there are no clear-cut rules on this, I thought it would be worthwhile to start a thread on it.
My thoughts were mentioned in the 9/11 thread, and are that if you give something the label 'disinformation', you imply that the person who said it put out disinformation (i.e. a disinformation 'agent'). I see there being a difference between disinformation and being wrong; the former is knowingly saying false or misleading data (i.e. akin to lying). That's why I suggest simply saying someone is wrong or words to that effect.
I think that calling another member's post 'disinformation', or calling another member a 'disinformation agent' (or similar) should not be allowed.
I foresee that there might be times when a member might refer to an external website - that another member quotes from - as containing disinformation. That might be acceptable as long as the person makes clear that they are not calling the poster a 'disinformation agent', merely that they are posting information from what another considers to be a 'disinformation' website. This could lead to problems whereby some consider that website to be truthful and accurate and others consider it to be disinformation, and the website is often quoted from during debates. For that reason I think it would be better to label somethings as simply being inaccurate, misleading, wrong, etc, rather than calling it 'disinformation'.
What are other peoples thoughts on this?
My contribution, FWIW, is this....
I'd have as few rules as possible. Every restriction, IMO, is likely to cause 10x the trouble it prevents.
There are some obvious things to ban, given prevalent cultural mores and the need to keep the forum accessible to all, including young folk. No crude swearing or smut. Repeated abusive behaviour should be controlled, if it occurs.
But IMO, the most effective force operating in favour of good behaviour in a forum where people use real identities is peer pressure - and a desire to protect one's good name in the long-term. Potentially, anything posted here is online indefinitely. Who wants to be embarrassed by their grandkids using SuperGoogle in 2020?
Rules that govern behaviour in the realm of political discourse are almost always counter-productive, IMO. Suppose one bans the ability to claim that someone else is operating out of bad motives and/or is telling blatant lies. Such a ban also helps protect those who actually do these naughty things. Is that really a good idea?
These type of accusations, IMO, are inevitable given the suibject matter covered by this forum.
If someone gets stuck into another person with nasty
ad hominem attacks, the likelihood is that unless they support their claims with very solid facts, they'll lose credibility in the eyes of the peer group as a whole. A subtle put-down from someone one respects can carry a lot more weight than a rebuke from someone one does not hold in esteem.
Different problems may arise when the identities of participants are not genuine or properly validated.
However, I think we mainly need rules that cover the norm. On this forum, I take the norm to be participation of real people with real identities.
My suggested general rule, in a nutshell, would be to have very few rules indeed.