Recent Articles

The Future Is Collaborative
The network rewards collaborators and punishes hoarders. The Web rewards those who are generous and punishes those who are mean. If the Web were a film, its plot would be much more like that of Lord of the Rings and...

Hillary Clinton And Web 2.0
Either someone smart is working with Senator - and would-be POTUS - Hillary Clinton, or she is a lot hipper to the Web 2.0 jive than I might have thought. According...

The Web Has Become The Organization
The Web has become the organization. An organization of a billion people with a billion things to say. And a million ways to work together. The ability to organize is the basis of life. It is also the basis of civilization. Without...

Blogging, Politics, And Modern Media
Robert Scoble revealed in his blog that he had been invited by the John Edwards campaign to cover the Senator's announcement regarding his intention to pursue the U.S. Presidency. Last week, I wrote a piece...

Which Search Engine Is Safest?
Can the results associated with your search queries send you to malicious sites? It depends on which search engine you use, but the probability this would happen has...

Google To Get Belgian News Hearing
A couple of parties to a lawsuit in Belgium against Google for its news indexing have settled with the search advertising giant, but Google will have to wait until 2007 to fight an injunction against its scraping of news...


04.09.07


O'Reilly Draws Up Blogging Code Policy

By David A. Utter

In the wake of the Kathy Sierra kerfuffle, there have been calls for a blogging code of ethics; the problem isn't with bloggers, or even their blogs.

Civility and courtesy tend to break down behind the anonymity of the Internet. People who would never dream of cursing or threatening another person face to face lose that mental barrier when there is a keyboard and monitor involved.

It can be a rough and tumble Internet, when people post some pretty nasty stuff about others, whether it's on a website that claims to harbor anarchic content, or just an email from a free anonymous webmail account.

(An aside to all the "anarchists" out there: anarchy means 'without leaders', not 'without order'. Causing trouble isn't being anarchic, it's being chaotic.)

Tech book publisher Tim O'Reilly has stepped into the discussion with a draft of a blogging code of conduct. Bloggers would post while hewing to certain behaviors, while requiring a stricter management of commenters.

The response from O'Reilly's commenters has been less than enthusiastic. They don't like the sheriff-style badges he's created ("Reminds me of some of the things America has done at its worst.").

Or the ban on anonymity ("...if one wants to get himself hanged, only then he would in person criticize the regime").

Low Rate eCommerce & Retail Plans

Or the quaint concept of civility ("An American, well-known in blogging circles, tried to raise the civility issue with a European audience a while back and it went down like a lead balloon. ")

The problem with a blogging code of conduct, as pointed out in a few places, is that it wouldn't have mitigated the nastiness Sierra faced. It wasn't bloggers, but commenters, who anonymously created the attacks.

Tony Hung neatly summarized the difference:

So, is it important to have a Bloggers Code of Conduct? No. And the whole issue of civility and collegiality is only one aspect of it.

But should we all have a comments policy that is clearly written and understood? Sure.

Even with the idea of a comment policy in place, it doesn't cover sites that are created for the purpose of being "anarchic." Some people are going to post hate, no matter what anyone, anywhere, thinks of it. Codes and policies are a nice idea, but a thicker skin and a competent lawyer to deal with truly outrageous incidents of threats and libel probably will serve people better.


About the Author:
David Utter is a staff writer for WebProNews covering technology and business.

About InternetProNews
News and updates for the internet professional

InternetProNews is brought to you by:

WebProNews.com Jayde.com
MarketingNewz.com SalesNewz.com
CareerNewz.com InvestNewz.com
eCommNewz.com WebsiteNotes.com
AdvertisingDay.com ManagerNewz.com
SoHoDay.com CRMNewz.com


-- InternetProNews is an iEntry, Inc. publication --
iEntry, Inc. 2549 Richmond Rd. Lexington KY, 40509
2007 iEntry, Inc. All Rights Reserved Privacy Policy Legal

archives | advertising info | news headlines | free newsletters | comments/feedback | submit article


InternetProNews News Archives About Us Feedback InternetProNews Home Page About Article Archive News Downloads WebProWorld Forums Jayde iEntry Advertise Contact