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- From: StarWatcher@uiuc.edu (StarWatcher)
- Subject: Re: I REQUEST RESPONSES TO THE FOLLOWING QUESTION...
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- References: <BtrD2q.1sz@cs.dal.ca>
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- Reply-To: StarWatcher@uiuc.edu
- Organization: Actuarial Science Program at UIUC
- Date: Sun, 30 Aug 1992 03:18:06 GMT
- Keywords: significant words from a document used as an index to content
- Lines: 157
-
-
- (Disclaimer: all of the following should be considered with a big,
- fat IMO stamped all over the place. These are my views, and may
- or may not have anything to do with reality. :)
-
- Gee! A thread that has the potential to be more "discussion" than
- flames!
-
- franklin@ug.cs.dal.ca (Steve Franklin) writes in a very long post:
-
- : The first question is the validity
- : of IRC's merits, and how it affects different individuals. Is it too
- : abusable? Is it solely a source of entertainment or a haven for
- : the socially repressed and lethargic?
-
- In its current form, IRC is primarily a recreation tool. It permits
- people from around the civilized (read: internet-connected) world to
- communicate with each other in an informal setting. IRC has the POTENTIAL
- to be a practical real-time communications tool for business, news, and
- for research. That potential is probably IRC's saving quality, and what
- gives it a step up on many MUDs and MUD-like entities.
-
- Like anything else on the net (email, news, ftp, ...) IRC is abusable.
- I doubt that that will change, even though IRC coders will try either
- by removing commands or by implementing stiffer security measures.
- For every move the "good guys" make, the evil hackers will come up with
- some counter move.
-
- Even though IRC is at this time mostly a source of entertainment,
- from time to time the more hard-core lusers (myself included) can
- take it too seriously, just as any entertainment source can be taken
- too seriously. As an example, I know of one person who spends all of
- hir free time on IRC, frequently calling long distance or neglecting
- hir children to do so. Hir family is not well off, and they frequently
- run the risk of eviction from their apartment, or having the utilities
- cut off, as well as being threatened with having their kids taken away.
- Yet, sie does not go out looking for work, but does travel around the
- U.S. visiting net.friends, despite the fact that sie doesn't have the
- money to do so.
-
- Granted, this is an extreme case. However, the problem lies with the
- person, not with the entertainment source. The obsessed luser is
- the exception more than the rule; most IRCers (with the possible
- exception of college freshmen) are perfectly able to keep their VR
- and RL lives straight, even though they might overlap from time to time.
-
- : As well, I have addressed another question of interest in this conversation.
- : Exactly what are the guidelines of censorship and privacy on IRC if any?
-
- I've always assumed that IRC was an open forum, so long as nothing falling
- under legal definitions of "abuse" or "harassment" or other such beasts
- occured.
-
- : [Re: his concerns in posting a log of a conversation]
- : I would be interesting in knowing hw you folks feel about it.
-
- IMO, posting a log of a "normal" serious conversation without the permission
- of the other major participants is bad manners, but is not necessarily
- unethical. At least you showed the courtesy of providing the other
- participants with pseudonyms.
-
- : Also, stemming from this - should an individual
- : be responsible for what they say and do on irc? I have seen many a rude
- : and suggestive statement on irc which could be considered harassment
- : or libel - is there no guideline or action that can be taken for this
- : type of behavior?
-
- People SHOULD, IMO, be held responsible for their actions on IRC. Even
- though IRC is a virtual reality, people should not be exempted from
- ethical behaviour and the laws of {enter the appropriate jurisdiction
- here, if there is one}. That's one of the reasons that I personally
- don't like faked userid's: if a person threatens or excessively
- harasses me or a friend of mine, I want some reliable way to seek
- appropriate recourse.
-
- As far as "guidelines" or "actions that can be taken," I'm no lawyer,
- so I can't give a definitive answer. Perhaps the folks at eff.org
- can give some insight.
-
- I do know, however, from a lawyer that IRC, Usenet, and email might
- fall under FCC regs in the US, which would mean that obscenities
- and harassment on the net would be federal offenses. It's just that
- no one has checked this out with a judge...yet.
-
- [much deleted]
-
- : <Superman> and haven't you ever seen "net marriages"? that's a symptom that
- : something is TERRIBLY wrong with irc
-
- Might I ask why? IRC is currently a game, a kind of electronic theatre to
- a certain extent. Some IRCers roleplay alter-egoes, while others of us
- are (somewhat) like our RL selves on the net. "Net marriages" are just
- one facet of this electronic play. RL marriages/engagements resulting
- from people having met on IRC are an interesting side-benefit (?) of
- the friendships that can be formed by using IRC as a communications
- tool.
-
- [...]
-
- : <Superman> you shouldn't want to escape, None
- : <Superman> shouldn't need one - if you need a break, go read a book - but
- : don't immerse yourself into delusions of a social environment that don't
- : exist
-
- An "escape" is fine, so long as the person does not get carried away
- (in which case the responsibility for the problem lies with the person,
- not with the means of escape) and the means of escape does not harm
- non-involved people. If people are hurt, the people "escaping" should
- be held responsible, not the means of escape itself.
-
- If you'd like more insight on this, I'd suggest posting the question
- "Are role-playing games inherently good or bad, and why do people hold
- those different opinions" to rec.games.frp.advocacy or r.g.f.misc.
- It is almost the same sort of question as you seem to be raising here.
-
- : <Superman> that is the danger of irc - it creates expectations and images
- : that are not and should not be there
-
- Again, the person creating those false expectations and images is at fault,
- not IRC. IRC is not alive and cannot "create" expectations, etc. It
- takes a luser to do that.
-
- : <Superman> that's my point - irc is condoning a sort of hermit-like
- : anti-socialness...
- : <Superman> a person need never leave home, because everythin they want
- : socially is available through the computer - THAT is my concern
-
- Many of us who use IRC do so because other (in our opinions) acceptable
- means of meeting people are NOT availible for some reason or another.
- In my case, I am shy, and have an excessive dislike for the bars on
- campus at UIUC -- the most visible means of "meeting" people in a
- non-academic setting here. I like IRC, in that I frequently have the
- opportunity to "get to know" a person without having to worry about
- the silliness of first impressions, before I actually meet that person.
- I met my SO on IRC, and had the opportunity to talk for long periods
- of time on the computer and then on the phone before I finally got to
- meet her face-to-face. We hit it off, and we might eventually even
- get RL married...but that's still a long ways down the road. I've
- made a lot of VR friendships on IRC, but when possible, I prefer extending
- that into a RL friendship. I met most of my local RL close friends
- through IRC.
-
- I could go on and make more comments about the rest of the log, but
- "None" seems to have done a good job of expressing my opinions already.
-
- Steve: I am touched by the concern you have shown for people in your
- post and in your IRC conversation. The world would be a better place
- if more people were concerned about each other. However, one of humankind's
- inherent rights is the much unproclaimed right to make a mistake.
- Making IRC less accessible because of your concerns would be an infringement
- on that right.
-
- --
- Michael Adams (aka StarWatcher) "A converted cannibal is one who,
- StarWatcher@uiuc.edu (NeXT & internet) on Friday, eats only fishermen."
- wi.5467@wizvax.methuen.ma.us (anonymous) -- Emily Lotney
- FREE1217@UIUCVMD.bitnet (bitnet)
-