On 03/29/2011 07:14 AM, Bruno Medeiros wrote:
On 28/03/2011 10:03, Alix Pexton wrote:
try this?

Dealing with Internet Trolls - the Cognitive Therapy Approach
http://unarmed.shlomifish.org/909.html

A...


Ha, I saw that article recently, I think it may work for overly excited
fanboys, or for people involved in a flame war, but not for trolls. In
other words I think it only works for people honest with their
intentions (even if very emotional about it), but not with people
deliberately spreading confusion, FUD, or just getting a kick out of
being a troll.

(Disclaimer: I only skimmed it.) That must deal with the emotional reaction to trolling, but I have none. The only issue is that one individual is manipulating the system at reddit to spread disinformation. In addition, he is obsessively following Walter and finding fault with every word he says. We just need a principled approach to solving this problem. (When I'll find some time I'll do some stylometry - I'll create a language model from iliekcaeks' past texts and run it through parametricpoly's text. The styles are extremely similar and a language model will catch that. If the obtained perplexity is low, then that is indicative of socket puppetry. Not that that would be an Earth-shattering discovery :o).)

I posted this last night in http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/gcmj1/digital_mars_aka_the_d_programming_language/:

=====
Registration is open for students starting today. Apply at the same location. We already have a strong lineup of mentors, projects, and students, and we're always looking for more. Good luck!
=====

When I downvote a post, I do so if it's factually incorrect or trolling. By that standard one would hardly find the above off-topic inside a thread about D's participation to GSoC 2011. Yet this morning the post was buried at the end of the thread with 13 downvotes canceling 14 upvotes. This is particularly cynical because at the end of the day it's about some students making some money through the summer working on something they find fun. If e.g. the competing language Go would have a summer of code proposal and discussion, I'd find it heinous of me to try to make that information disappear or otherwise drive people away.

Also, the GtkD announcement I made last night was deleted. I just emailed moderators about it. Leaving aside the fact that I'm doing what the authors of GtkD ought to be doing, I suspect moderators would automatically or semi-automatically delete a post if 10-20 users would click on "spam" for it. It's possible some socket puppets have been hard at work last night.


Andrei

Reply via email to