Difference in conversation style Show more
Difference in conversation style Show more
Difference in conversation style Show more
Difference in conversation style Show more
Difference in conversation style Show more
Difference in conversation style Show more
Difference in conversation style Show more
Difference in conversation style Show more
Difference in conversation style Show more
Difference in conversation style Show more
Difference in conversation style Show more
Difference in conversation style Show more
Difference in conversation style Show more
Difference in conversation style Show more
Difference in conversation style Show more
@karl @strypey But the possibility of public response does not invalidate other wishes. You definitely have the right write a comment, referring to their public post. But do you have a right to mention them, to direct unwanted attention on them, to appear in their threads? I want to move beyond a legalistic argument (yes it is legal) or a UI argument (yes it is afforded) to a culture of politeness and appropriateness. How appropriate is it? It depends!
@kensanata @karl this is fascinating. Because the other side of it, do you have a right to comment without giving credit the originator of the discourse? In academic discourse this is beyond just being rude, it's plagiarism, and is the closest thing the #IvoryTower has to hanging offence. Again, once someone specifically *asks* to be untagged/ not mentioned (and not just vaguely hints at it), fair enough, but I've never seen anyone disrespect that.
@karl I read that as “these people are using social media wrong and they should be using a blog instead” – and I think you’re wrong. 😀
@karl That last point is definitely an issue.