Aug. 3rd, 2009 11:19 pm

Ponderance

textualdeviance: (fuzzy grammar)
[personal profile] textualdeviance
Maybe I'm just imagining it, but it seems to me that the quality of online discourse has declined at the same rate of improved connectivity to remote areas in red states.

Used to be, when you'd have a debate on some forum or whatever, you'd get a certain quantity of misanthrope trolls, Randian megalomaniacs and far-out space cadets, but overall, things were relatively sane.

Sure, people would disagree, and politics and such were never homogenous, but people knew that a poorly spelled missive with no research beyond "this happened to my cousin's best friend" would earn them a boot to the head. You had to be sharp, coherent and completely prepared to back up whatever you were spewing or you'd be Instant Breakfast for one of the guys who ended up founding Wikipedia or something.

But now that one-horse towns have broadband, all of a sudden, the whole internet's becoming less literate. It's no longer enough to simply avoid users with AOL or WebTV accounts and the back-fence chittering spaces they'd frequent. Any public posting that hits on a topic of interest to mouth breathers with an eighth-grade education and a sincere conviction that gay people and feminists are agents of The Terrorists will, as a matter of course, be flooded with barely readable posts from said numbnuts.

Oh, for the days when it was just the script kiddies, the occasional Ponzi schemers and that one weird guy who kept trying to get you to believe that the Masons are behind everything and you can get free electricity by sticking paper clips into pickles.

And when forums actually had moderators.

Sigh...
Date: 2009-08-05 05:04 am (UTC)

From: [identity profile] textualdeviance.livejournal.com
The cultural dominance thing was in response to the implications about privilege (and safe spaces.) True that nerdy folk have some measure of privilege in a lot of situations, but I'd hestitate to say that we're culturally dominant enough to be "safe" in general circumstances. (And that's especially true for nerdy women.)

I think you're probably right that respect for knowledge (and therefore respect for nerdiness) is a lot more widespread in Europe. It seems ridiculous in an age when the richest people in the world are often tech titans, but nerdy kids still get beaten up in U.S. schools, and in some subcultures, liking education or "showing off" what you know is considered the height of uncool.

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