Comments and community on Coastsider

Editorial posted by Barry Parr on Jul 07, 2007 at 05:41 am in  About Coastsider   Media
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In reading a Q&A with New York Times Digital News Editor Jim Roberts, I was struck by how close the Times’s guidelines for readers posting comments are to the ones we use here at Coastsider. There’s nothing new in our guidelines or those of the Times. These principles are well known in the online community. However, other sites do operate under very different rules.

Early on, we tried running anonymous comments without prior moderation. We did get a lot more postings in those days. But Coastsider today feel more like a conversation among neighbors than a hit-and-run argument. Without these rules, comments tend to be anonymous, poor, nasty, brutish and short.

If you follow these rules, regardless of the forum you’re posting in, you’ll get more respect and better responses.

Unlike some other news sites, we review every single comment that readers send in. We have considered trying software that filters profanity or doing what other sites do and allowing readers to flag objectionable comments. But so far we have not found anything that substitutes for having trained editors or news assistants read each one to make sure it is suitable for publication.

So, what is suitable? Well, we do want to know what people think, and we grant our readers a degree of leeway in criticizing newsmakers and in finding fault with how we present the news. But we draw the line in these ways:

1. No profanity. No obscenity. No asterisks that take the place of letters in objectionable words.

2. No name calling or insults. I don’t like it when I see the words “idiot” or “moron” or “fascist.” I can be somewhat tolerant of harsh criticism of public officials, but I am super-aggressive in deleting comments in which other commenters are being attacked. And while I don’t mind criticism of The New York Times, personal attacks on our reporters won’t be tolerated. And forget about ethnic, racial, religious or sexual slurs. Finally, try not to dominate the conversation so that other people have the opportunity to express their opinions even if they disagree with yours.

3. Stay on point. Comments that stray from the topic are pointless and will be bounced. And we tend to set the bar even higher when we have a huge flow on a certain subject and some of the sentiments seem repetitive.

4. Don’t bother sending press releases.

5. Don’t rage and don’t SHOUT. Lot’s of readers seem to think that UPPERCASE comments are more effective in getting their points across. We prefer a more tempered conversation.

6. Please use your real name. We don’t require this but we’d like to know who you are. If you sign your name Bill Clinton or Frank Zappa, we’ll in all likelihood delete it, unless we’re certain you’re the former president or the reincarnated Mother of Invention.

Comments

Comment 1 by John Lynch  on  Jul 08  at  12:18am  •  All my comments • 

It would be most appreciated and considerate if our local newspaper followed your approach rather than allowing people to use such crazy nom de plumes.

John lynch

Comment 2 by Barry Parr  on  Jul 08  at  12:04pm  •  All my comments • 

TalkAbout certainly do feel like it could use some adult supervision. There have been a couple of times I considered posting there (including places where I’m being flat-out lied about) but chose not to because it’s futile to try and carry on a conversation there.

Comment 3 by Kevin J. Lansing  on  Jul 08  at  6:55pm  •  All my comments • 

I agree that Coastsider’s policy of requiring real names is a good one. Anonymous posted comments are completely weightess. A comment with a real name attached to it is like a mini letter-to-the-editor, without having to wait a week to see it published.

That said, I think Coastsider could do a better job of clearing comments for posting in a more timely manner. Members with a good track record could be cleared for automatic immediate posting—-but subject to public excommunication if they abuse the privledge. Just a suggestion.


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