cellio: (mandelbrot)
[personal profile] cellio
Now that LiveJournal has eliminated invite codes, there are (apparently) more troll accounts -- people create a disposable account simply to harrass people and then move on. People who run communities are having trouble with this because it's extra administrative load to ban them, delete their comments, etc. This complaint I understand.

I gather that some people have created troll communities with provocative names and added people as members without their consent. This complaint I definitely understand, as the presumption is that you choose your communities. I would like it if being added to a community (as opposed to adding myself) generated an email challenge/response cycle, actually, like some mailing-list software does.

Some people are also upset that trolls add them as friends. They are, apparently, upset at seeing certain names on their friend-of lists. This complaint I do not understand; no one has any control over who lists you as a friend, so how could any thinking person hold it against you if someone objectionable supposedly reads your journal? I was recently added by someone I didn't recognize, and when I went to the journal to investigate I found one "this is my journal" message with about 20 comments saying "take me off your list you filthy troll". (The comments, and later the entry, have since been deleted.) Now I don't have any personal experience with this person, troll or not, and have no basis for judgement, but the reactions seem extreme to me. Besides, isn't that just what they want -- to get people worked up?


By the way, a post in [livejournal.com profile] news today said that they are working on breaking the "friends" notion into its two different parts, subscriptions and access control. I look forward to seeing how they do that. I wonder which parts will be public (the way friends are now). I also idly wonder about the sociological effects when people are able to designate some of their "friends" with "I actually read you" and others as "I don't follow you but I trust you with my secrets". I predict lots of angst among the high-school contingent.

Re:

Date: 2004-01-30 07:37 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zare-k.livejournal.com
[Unless the idea is to continue to publish a "friends" list to the world but let the individual user flag them for reading, access, or both privately. I'm not sure that would be a good idea, though.]

Why not? Offhand I would tend to favor that approach because it gives the people greater control over content access while providing a layer of abstraction over the drama-inducing parts of the process. Doing it explicitly accomplishes the same functionality but as you observed the potential for drama when people see how people actually treat their content is much higher.

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