Hmmm. Way too many rules in my opinion, many of them virtually unenforceable, lest they intend to ban 90% of the membership. The "trolling rule" is the classic example of this: 1.2.e "attempt to inflame or provoke another member(s)." How on earth do you enforce this objectively and consistently?Jörmungandr wrote:Yeah, I don't disagree with the spirit of most of the rules in their FUA, but unfortunately there is little that can be done about selective enforcement. I think you would have to wipe the current staff clean and go for a more balanced mod staff with more diverse opinions, in order to get some sort of fairness. They did make Weaver a mod recently, so maybe I can finally get some civilized discourse in them there gun control threads.Gallstones wrote:It is the rule that was invoked to suspend Seth.Seabass wrote:Warren, they actually do have a rule against misrepresentation:
1.2.m. "quote mining, plagiarising, or otherwise purposely misrepresenting content from other members or external sources."
http://www.rationalskepticism.org/annou ... t-t76.html
He can probably verify or correct me on that.
And yet repeated misrepresentations of private gun ownership advocates as paranoid gun nuts, or meat eaters as insensitive murderers gets no like attention.
1.2m?They are writing their own bible.
It seems to me they only invoke the more abstruse and ambiguous rules when they decide it necessary to expunge, shall we say, certain undesirable elements from the board.
Why any atheist forum needs anything beyond your basic personal attack rule, some rules against racist, sexist, or anti-gay comments, and the obligatory legal stuff, is beyond me. With so many ambiguous, amorphous, malleable rules piled on to one another, ideologically driven moderation is an inevitability.
And don't even get me started on the grossly inconsistent ways in which formal/informal warnings are applied.
I probably shouldn't complain about that forum on this forum; it's just a bit of a bummer seeing the way the "spiritual successor" to richarddawkins.net turned out. I rather enjoyed the Dawkins forum. It had a large, interesting, diverse, and colorful cast of zany characters

