Moderating Comments: taming trolls and banning the bores (BeebCamp)
How do you moderate comments on a website without reducing free speech? Joanna Geary from The Times online @timesjoanna is sick of being accused of gagging readers because they don’t put every abusive or banal reader comment up on the website.
Anyone who looks at the comments on news/comment websites like The Guardian’s Comment Is Free will recognise how fragmented and uncivil the ‘debate’ can be. Trolls are the worst problem, but Joanna points out that on a busy site, sheer repetition is just as big a barrier to a coherent thread.
Suggestions for a cure include putting up a payment barrier (!) and dumping the cruddy comments into a separate thread.
Of course, it would help if the website is clear about what it wants the reader to do. If you say Have Your Say then don’t be surprised if that is precisely what the public wants to do.
Perhaps we ought to work harder to incentivise ‘good’ comment posters? Highlight the best comments, for example, so people get kudos for cleverness.
November 27th, 2009 at 3:37 pm
Actually, this is something the much-maligned (and rightly so!) LabourList has offered since day one. On each post, there’s an option to ‘show trash comments’ – OK, so maybe some more sensitive labelling might be in order, but it’s the same concept.
November 27th, 2009 at 8:51 pm
[...] Beckett wrote up Joanna Geary’s session on ‘moderating Comments: taming trolls and banning the bores‘ and Chris Thorpe’s on ‘mining value in the digital data [...]
November 28th, 2009 at 3:50 pm
Rewarding well-thought-out comments that add to the value of content is a great idea. Many bloggers do the same – bringing commenters into posts and having a conversation with them. Justin Webb also used to do this for the BBC when he was blogging on the US election trail.
November 29th, 2009 at 3:01 pm
[...] Reynolds, Andrew Bowden, Charlie Beckett, and Paul Murphy of the BBC Internet Blog have already written up some of their impressions of the [...]
December 12th, 2009 at 1:41 am
[...] Reynolds, Andrew Bowden, Charlie Beckett, and Paul Murphy of the BBC Internet Blog have already written up some of their impressions of the [...]