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28 Nov 06:03

A tsunami of testimonies: assaults in the Swedish larp community

by Guest Blogger
Courtney shared this story from Geek Feminism Blog.

Warning: this post details sexual violence.

This is a guest post by Kristin Nilsdotter Isaksson. It originally appeared in Swedish and in English on Spelkult. The English translation is by Charlie Charlotta Haldén.

Editor’s note: “larp” is live-action role play.

We’re talking about sexual harassment in the world of larp. Molestation, groping, assault and rape of participants who are asleep or intoxicated, aggravated rape with violent abuse, and even attempted murder.

On June 17, 2014, a new Facebook group was created for Swedish-speaking larpers who identify wholly or partially as women. The group quickly drew many members, and now comprises 580 larpers of varying ages and backgrounds. The idea was to create a sanctuary for discussions about different aspects of being a female larper. There are discussion threads about portraying female antagonists, about dealing with menstruation during larps, about sewing tricks, creating characters, organising larps. Small questions, big questions, and questions of vital importance.

It’s so important that we talk about our experiences. About how common this is, and that it’s not OK. About our right to say no, and that it’s never, ever, acceptable for someone not to listen. Everybody knows a victim, but nobody knows a perpetrator, and it’s time to take a stand now. — anonymous

A lot of times, I am personally skeptical of gender separated forums and arenas. I think spaces that are open for all tend to support a broader sharing of experiences. But I have realised that there are exceptions.

Lately, a darker subject has crept into the discussion threads, and during the past few weeks, a tsunami of voices has swept over us. Post after post, comment after comment, telling stories of painful experiences. We’re talking about sexual assault. At larps, or in larping circles. Over a thousand posts detailing experiences, sharing thoughts, discussing preventive measures, and not least, holding out hands in support.

There are a lot of perpetrators, and a lot of victims. The threads almost exclusively tell of assaults perpetrated by men towards women. There have been instances of sexual harassment, molestation, groping, assault and rape of sleeping or intoxicated larpers, aggravated rape with violent abuse, and even attempted murder. Some of these incidents have been reported, but a large amount of them have not reached the police, or even the larp organisers. Until now.

I was almost completely out of it, and I couldn’t do much of anything to stop it, because I hardly understood what was happening. He raped me, and in the morning I was ashamed and just left the camp, because it felt like it was my own fault. — anonymous

A lot of cases involve young people, 15-16-year-olds who are offered alcohol and harassed by older boys or men, and then things get out of hand during the night. In other cases, the acts are meticulously planned and perpetrated over a long period of time.

I was always supposed to play a submissive role at the larps, a servant to the group, to his friends. I was thrown around like a handbag. But I felt so worthless, so I reckoned I should be happy to get any attention. Then it got worse, the mental stuff turned into physical abuse… — anonymous

Many people ask themselves how this can happen. Shouldn’t larping be a safe arena, with a lot of eyes and ears that can react if something seems to be going wrong?

Most probably, it can happen because the people around let it happen. Partly because larpers are not really any different from other people in society, partly because the setting of a lot of larps actually makes sexual harassment more acceptable. Sociology calls this “habitus”, a series of codes that underlie a person’s behaviour. A lot of larps, especially in the fantasy genre, are stereotypical. Gender roles are clear and coded with different behaviours.

Male players will often choose a warrior character with a macho attitude, an acceptance for sexualising women and literally taking what he wants. This is a behaviour that would not be at all OK in normal society, but one that is seen a lot at different larps.

In the same way, female characters are often coded to be submissive, service-minded, soft, madonna-whores, or defenceless. Given that context, it can seem perfectly reasonable if a male player is upset about new rules suddenly being enforced that forbid playing on rape, since he had planned that his character should be an active rapist during the larp. When female characters are coded as submissive, the more dominant aspects of the male characters are intensified.

I was 13 years old, going to my very first larp together with a friend. None of us had any experience, and we didn’t know anyone except each other. The larp begins, and everything goes pretty well until the second day, when we are handed a note. The note says that the two older men in the tent across from ours want to meet us, because they want to find wives. This made me extremely uncomfortable, and I ended up hiding in the woods for the remaining days. — anonymous

Another contributing factor in several stories is that the victim has been separated from her group and placed in a new situation where she hardly knows the other players. Her safety net is gone.

Note that I didn’t know ONE SINGLE person in Sverok (The Swedish Gaming Federation) then. I had gone there all alone, representing my organisation, and had never met anyone else, so I didn’t have a single person there to talk to or seek support from. — anonymous

Some of the stories shared tell of incidents where larpers have lost their way in the middle of the night and been offered a place to sleep in exchange for sexual favours, or woken up with an unknown person’s hands all over their body. Because the victim has few contacts in the new group, she automatically becomes dependent on the perpetrator, and her scope for action is restricted.

Suddenly, I notice someone lying down next to me and starting to touch me, moving their hands under my clothes. I was really gone, but I realise that it’s the guy from before, and that makes me feel I can’t say no, because he might have thought I wanted to. So I let him keep on, and I just wanted to go to sleep so I didn’t have to experience this. We never talked again, and I never told anyone. — anonymous

In many of the cases, shame or fear of retribution has kept the people involved from telling anyone about the incidents. Moreover, the perpetrator usually has a larger amount of social capital than the victim does. They may be much older and more experienced, perhaps an organiser or someone with a lot of contacts in the larping world – as one person wrote, “someone you could trust”. If the person who was assaulted would report it to the police, or involve an organiser, there is almost always a legitimate fear that she would tarnish more people than the perpetrator – their friends, their network, the larp event – by diminishing the perpetrator’s power and social standing. This very strong group mechanism can often cause many people to initially take the perpetrator’s side and turn against the victim. There may be accusations saying that she put herself in the situation, that she behaved like a slut, that she was drunk and provocative and “corrupted” the perpetrator. There are numerous examples of this. The Bjästa case in Sweden and the Steubenville rape in the US are just two well-known examples outside the larping world.

I walked homewards, ice cold and freezing. It was dark, I couldn’t even see the path. Almost knocked myself out. I just wanted to get home so I could sleep. This guy was friends with the organisers, with my friends, everybody. Nobody would believe me, and that’s why I just kept quiet. — anonymous

This ongoing conversation has already resulted in some practical measures: Several organisers have taken action against alleged perpetrators, and suggestions for preventive efforts have been put forth, such as larps providing safety hosts and safe sleeping quarters. And people are talking, and processing. Some who have not dared go to a larp for several years because of fear have now felt safe enough to sign up again, and many larp organisers are working hard to ensure that larp is not a lawless haven for perpetrators to hide in.

All this may lead to people being named and shamed, and suffering reprisals such as being banned from larps and other social contexts. Whether this is justified or not is, of course, a matter of judgement. There is also a significant risk that those who have now dared to speak out might be accused and called into question.

My blood runs cold when I realise that I probably know several of the guys described here. People I have larped with, had fun with, and maybe been lucky enough not to end up alone with — anonymous

But this can also lead to a much safer larping experience with increased freedom of action for many players. The tolerance for this kind of behaviour may decrease as the spotlight is placed upon it. What might have been silently accepted earlier can now be pulled out into the open and questioned. Together, organisers and players develop new methods to ensure safer play for everyone, and that more women dare take up more space and choose among a broader array of characters.

The issues are now being discussed in other open larp forums too, and several players have called for more male voices in the conversation. Partly because this is not just about women’s experiences. There are not only male perpetrators. There are male victims too, and they may risk invisibility and stigmatisation. But there are also a lot of men who want to do something about this and show support. However, the question is if this massive sharing of experiences would ever have happened at all if the forum had been open to everyone. Most of the members of the Facebook group would probably say a resounding “no” to that question. Those who have been subjected to violations need a sanctuary in order to find the courage to start talking.

Our newsfeeds keep filling up. We keep talking. We discover connections. Someone who has felt desperately alone in her experience discovers, with hope and with horror, that there are many others out there who have been through similar things. This gives strength and breeds courage. The voices are powerful, and they will surely not quieten for a long, long time yet.

Background

The Facebook group referred to in the text is named LWU, Larp Women Unite. The group was started by Karin Edman after Linnea Risinger came up with the idea during the Summer of 2014.

The ”Prata om det” campaign (”Talk about it”, hashtag #prataomdet) was and is a movement consisting of writers, bloggers and tweeters, emanating from a Twitter discussion started by geek feminist Johanna Koljonen in 2010. This concerned sharing stories about grey areas in sexual situations, about when sex becomes violation. This campaign opened doors to conversations that had not previously been had on a larger scale in “geek culture”.

28 Nov 05:31

arcadequeen: white occupy groups coopted and took over the denver mike brown rally, started...

arcadequeen:

white occupy groups coopted and took over the denver mike brown rally, started changing the chants from “black lives matter” to “all lives matter”. they took the front lines and were trying to provoke the police when everyone else was calm. they literally silenced the black people in their own movement and took over and changed direction. so me and my friend left.

Jesus Christ. That’s disgusting.

27 Nov 21:21

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26 Nov 18:26

Blade Runner's Police Spinner gets an Adorable makeover

by James Whitbrook on Toybox, shared by Ria Misra to io9

Blade Runner's Police Spinner gets an Adorable makeover

Blade Runner might not seem like the first movie that you think of kidsy, cute merchandising opportunities, but this Police Spinner is just goddamn loveable. It's even got a 'Pull Back and Go!' feature!

Read more...


26 Nov 18:26

Newswire: Man sues Disney for not letting him build and sell a real-life X-Wing

by Mike Vago

The Walt Disney Company is famously litigious, so it’s perhaps only just desserts that someone has finally sued Disney on an incredibly weighty matter. New Jersey resident Joseph Alfred has sued Disney, along with CEO Robert Iger and company President Bob Chapek, for breach of “implied-in-fact contract” and “promissory estoppel,” because the company refused Alfred’s request to give him the rights to build Luke Skywalker’s scientifically-implausible and heavily-copyrighted X-Wing fighter from the Star Wars films.

Alfred, who unsurprisingly is representing himself in this matter, outlines a scheme in which Terrafugia Inc., a company that is already prototyping a flying car, would build one in the shape of an X-Wing. Alfred estimates 93,000 people would would contribute $10,000 apiece towards a Kickstarter campaign he has not actually started, netting just under a billion dollars to build a thing that only exists in a movie with laser ...

26 Nov 18:24

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26 Nov 18:22

Charted

Charted:

Charted is a tool for automatically visualizing data… Give it the link to a data file and Charted returns a beautiful, shareable chart of the data.

With support for CSV and Google Spreadsheets.

26 Nov 18:19

Preserving Inuit culture with the videogame “Never Alone”

by Teddy Papes

whale_interior1

Never Alone was developed by Upper One Games in collaboration with the Cook Inlet Tribal Council. Along with a team of developers and programmers, Iñupiat storytellers and elders joined together in a atypical creative process to make an atypical game.

For Vesce and the rest of the game’s development team, partnering with amateur game makers was unusually challenging. “To make Never Alone, we had to break from some traditional and fundamental ways of making games and bring the community into the creative process—a community that knew very little about the medium but that had strong thoughts on what they wanted to see in a game based on their culture,” Vesce said. He called this kind of collaboration “inclusive development,” in which each group is a student of the other’s world. “While it’s extremely rewarding, it also requires a huge commitment from all sides to build a foundation of mutual trust and respect.”

Despite the importance of keeping the Iñupiats’ vision for the project, there was no formal approval process during development. “It was more subtle, involving conversations with many different people, soliciting and gauging reactions to ideas, and finding creative solutions to meet both the community’s goals and our goals as game developers,” Vesce said. “When we encountered things that sounded great to us as game developers but didn’t resonate with our community partners, they would often present alternatives that ended up being much more interesting and often more challenging to incorporate.”

Read more.

26 Nov 18:18

GoPro reportedly planning to launch consumer drones next year

by Chris Welch

GoPro will soon be manufacturing drones. The Wall Street Journal reports that the company, known for its hugely popular line of action video cameras, will release consumer drones "late next year." GoPro's drones will be multi-rotor helicopters that carry high-definition cameras likely resembling those used in existing devices like the GoPro Hero series. According to the report, GoPro is aiming to price its consumer drones between $500 and $1,000, an aggressive range that could immediately shake up the consumer drone market.

Companies like DJI and Parrot have established an early foothold in that business, but GoPro's reputation and dominance of the action cam segment will likely put its future competitors on the defensive almost immediately. Some existing drones already support GoPro cameras, so it will be interesting to see if manufacturers change their strategy once they're competing directly against the company. We know GoPro can build quality cameras, so the bigger question is about the drone hardware itself. At this point, Parrot and DJI have both had multiple tries at building quality consumer drones. And the field will likely be even larger once GoPro's drones are ready. But in many ways, it's an obvious move; you can already take GoPro's cameras nearly anywhere. Now it sounds like the company wants to become the all-in-one solution for aerial photography.

26 Nov 18:16

Noelle Stevenson on INPRNT. Noelle Stevenson has some fantastic...

firehose

via THANKGODYOUREHERE











Noelle Stevenson on INPRNT.

Noelle Stevenson has some fantastic prints available in her INPRNT Store which is currently offering free shipping until December 1st, 2014.

(This post was sponsored by INPRNT).

26 Nov 18:12

Jian Ghomeshi Has Been Arrested For Sexual Assault

firehose

update

Former CBC Radio Host Jian Ghomeshi, who has been under fire for weeks for alleged serial abuse of women, will face charges in court today.
26 Nov 18:12

Hiker Photographed Bear Before It Killed Him

A New Jersey hiker killed by a bear in September took a series of photos of the animal with his cellphone before it mauled him to death.
26 Nov 18:12

Shakespeare First Folio Found In French library

The book — one of only 230 believed to still exist — had lain undisturbed in library at Saint-Omer for 200 years.
26 Nov 18:12

People Buy So Many Guns On Black Friday The Background Check System Can't Keep Up

On a typical day in America, someone is killed with a firearm every 16 minutes. And every minute, gun shops make about 40 new requests for criminal background checks on people wanting weapons. On Black Friday, the rush accelerates to nearly two checks a second.
26 Nov 18:10

Is this the beginning of the end of the nation state? - 25/11/2014

firehose

via Jakkyn

Is this the beginning of the end of the nation state? - 25/11/2014:

"For about AU$70 and a thumbprint you can now become an e-resident of Estonia. It’s the first country in the world to offer what it calls a digital identity to foreigners. Some people say it may be the beginning of the end of the nation state."

26 Nov 17:39

adnubilated, adj.

firehose

'Darkened by clouds, clouded.'

1891 Morning Oregonian (Portland, Oregon) 5 Dec. 11/5 An educated farmer. It is suspected that he is a graduate with adnubilated brains.

26 Nov 17:20

Photo



26 Nov 16:19

Uber's Latest Round Said To Value The Company At $40 Billion

firehose

failure is success

Uber is close to raising a round of financing that would value the mobile car-booking company at $35 billion to $40 billion, according to people with knowledge of the situation.
26 Nov 16:19

How Regulation Is Pushing Small Businesses Out Of The Legal Marijuana Market

firehose

of course it is

Colorado has plenty of small potrepreneurs. Marijuana advocates talk up the value of their businesses to create jobs, pay taxes and help the sick. But at last week’s National Marijuana Business Conference in Las Vegas, the future of pot looked much less like an archipelago of mission-driven small enterprises than an emerging mega industry to be dominated by large companies.
26 Nov 16:18

Two men have been arrested for uploading an copy of Expendables 3 to the Internet weeks before it wa

by Katharine Trendacosta
firehose

can you imagine explaining this to a cellmate

Two men have been arrested for uploading an copy of Expendables 3 to the Internet weeks before it was released. Rather than the usual civil suit and monetary penalties, London detectives in the Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit arrested the men suspected of illegally getting the film from a cloud-based storage system. [Deadline]

Read more...








26 Nov 16:18

Peggy Makes With the Punching in New Agent Carter Clip! - Listen, blogging is equally as physically taxing. I swear.

by Carolyn Cox
firehose

hat game in this show is promising

26 Nov 16:16

A Map of the Most Googled ‘Distinct’ Thanksgiving Recipes Broken Down by State

by Brian Heater
firehose

Merlitons are flavorless, mushy, nasty gourds used as filler in holiday dishes. The casserole is Emeril's idea (the spelling gives it away, don't know why that dude spells it with an i). I've never had them at home and never saw them in our supermarkets, only in Natchitoches. According to Wikipedia, the root is yam-like and happy to be fried, so maybe they're just using the wrong part up there.

"In Australia, where it is called choko, a persistent urban legend is that McDonald's apple pies were made of chokos, not apples."

NYT piece: 'WHAT MAKES THANKSGIVING IN LOUISIANA?
On Facebook, readers said: “Turducken.” “Fried turkey.” “Gumbo.” ' Spot on as fuck. To thank the newspaper for running their obituaries, one of the funeral homes would always deep-fry a turkey for the whole staff on Thanksgiving. We invented the goddamn Turducken, and gumbo is the best cold-weather dish fuck you clam chowder

Thanksgiving Map

The New York Times has a map of the United States detailing the most “distinct” Thanksgiving recipes Googled by each state. The results were compiled by Google, tossing out obvious choices like turkey and stuffing, instead focusing on unique foodstuffs, such as “frog eye salad” in the Rocky Mountain States and the “pig pickin cake” of North Carolina. The map was created in part due to fallout from a recent Thanksgiving map designed by the paper to reflect “recipes that evoke each of the 50 states.”

image via The New York Times

26 Nov 16:08

A Proposal From the 1930s to Fill in the Hudson River to Help Alleviate New York City’s Population Crisis

by Brian Heater

Hudson

A March 1934 issue of the technology magazine Modern Mechanix details the plans by engineering scholar Norman Sper to fill in New York City’s Hudson River in order to increase the landmass of Manhattan and help alleviate the housing and traffic problems of a rapidly growing population.

If the Russians had the vision and the courage not only to build huge cities from the ground up, but to practically rebuild an empire, surely America should not be frightened at a project as big as this.

Hudson

Hudson

images via Modern Mechanix

Thanks, Jason Laskodi!

26 Nov 16:08

Former HP CEO Carly Fiorina Considering US Presidential Run

by Soulskill
firehose

great

McGruber writes: Fired HP CEO and failed Republican Senate candidate Carly Fiorina is "actively exploring a 2016 presidential run." Fiorina has been "talking privately with potential donors, recruiting campaign staffers, courting grass-roots activists in early caucus and primary states, and planning trips to Iowa and New Hampshire starting next week."

Share on Google+

Read more of this story at Slashdot.








26 Nov 16:07

CNN Inadvertently Airs NYC Protesters Chanting 'F*** CNN!'

by Jamilah King
CNN Inadvertently Airs NYC Protesters Chanting 'F*** CNN!'

During last night's protests for Mike Brown in New York City, this happened on CNN. And it was awkward:

26 Nov 16:07

In Cleveland, Tamir Rice's Family Asks Police to Release Video

by Carla Murphy
In Cleveland, Tamir Rice's Family Asks Police to Release Video

The family of a 12-year-old boy who died Sunday morning from a police-inflicted gunshot wound to his stomach is asking the mayor and the police department to release video of the incident. What's known of this still-developing story is that the tragedy unfolded Saturday afternoon when two officers responded to calls of a "man" pointing a gun at people in the park. The replica gun was a toy. There are reports that dispatch did not relay crucial information to the officer, however, that the gun "was probably fake" and that the guy was "probably a juvenile." The officer, on the force less than a year, fired twice and at least one bullet hit Tamir Rice, reports say.

Today at 1 p.m. EST, police "will provide additional updates and audio and visual evidence from the use of deadly force," according to a November 25 post on a Cleveland Division of Police Web siteThe medical examiner's office, which ruled Rice's death a homicide, has so far denied requests for more information, according to Northeast Ohio Media Group. The officer's name has not yet been released.

Rice's killing comes as Cleveland's police department is currently under investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice to determine whether it regularly uses excessive force. Cleveland residents have been protesting both the Tamir Rice shooting and the Ferguson grand jury decision.

26 Nov 15:57

Peter King says Obama should invite Darren Wilson to the White House - The Week Magazine

firehose

I think it would be very helpful if President Obama went and met with the police officer, or invited him to the White House and said, "You've gone through four months of smear and slander, and the least we can do is tell you that it's unfortunate that it happened and thank you for doing your job."

'King also criticized Obama for not praising Wilson in his remarks Monday night.'

stupid fucking New Yorkers


CNN

Peter King says Obama should invite Darren Wilson to the White House
The Week Magazine
In the aftermath of Monday night's grand jury ruling to not indict police officer Darren Wilson for shooting unarmed teenager Michael Brown, many are calling for President Barack Obama to visit Ferguson, Mo. Rep. Peter King (R-N.Y.) has a bit of a different ...
King to Obama: Invite Wilson to White HouseCNN
Peter King's most over-the-top suggestion everMSNBC
Obama invited Billy Joel out for a White House smoke: reportNew York Daily News
Mediaite -Breitbart News -Twitchy
all 15 news articles »
26 Nov 15:55

T-shirt Printer Makes Disposable Circuits #WearableWednesday

by Becky Stern

disposable-electronics-t-shirt-printer-1

Researchers in Singapore have silkscreened circuits:

Someday soon, your milk carton may be able to tell you that the milk has spoiled, or your bandage may indicate that it needs changing. These and other things could be made possible by a new technique developed at Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University, which allows disposable electronics to be printed on a variety of surfaces, using an existing T-shirt printer.

Developed by a team led by Prof. Joseph Chang, the system incorporates building materials including “silver nanoparticles, carbon and plastics.” These are applied in layers to flexible materials such as paper, plastic and aluminum foil.

The researchers have printed off complete electrical circuits containing resistors, transistors and capacitors. These circuits have included a 4-bit digital-to-analog converter (typically used for converting digital signals into sound), and RFID tags.

disposable-electronics-t-shirt-printer


Flora breadboard is Every Wednesday is Wearable Wednesday here at Adafruit! We’re bringing you the blinkiest, most fashionable, innovative, and useful wearables from around the web and in our own original projects featuring our wearable Arduino-compatible platform, FLORA. Be sure to post up your wearables projects in the forums or send us a link and you might be featured here on Wearable Wednesday!

26 Nov 15:52

Photo

firehose

hi saucie















26 Nov 15:22

Because Reading is Fundamental

by Jeff Atwood
firehose

"we created a badge for reading to the end of a long 100+ post topic"

fuck you. eat shit

Most discussions show a bit of information next to each user:

What message does this send?

  • The only number you can control printed next to your name is post count.
  • Everyone who reads this will see your current post count.
  • The more you post, the bigger that number next to your name gets.

If I have learned anything from the Internet, it is this: be very, very careful when you put a number next to someone's name. Because people will do whatever it takes to make that number go up.

If you don't think deeply about exactly what you're encouraging, why you're encouraging it, and all the things that may happen as a result of that encouragement, you may end up with … something darker. A lot darker.

Printing a post count number next to every user's name implies that the more you post, the better things are. The more you talk, the better the conversations become. Is this the right message to send to everyone in a discussion? More fundamentally, is this even true?

I find that the value of conversations has little to do with how much people are talking. I find that too much talking has a negative effect on conversations. Nobody has time to listen to the resulting massive stream of conversation, they end up just waiting for their turn to pile on and talk, too. The best conversations are with people who spend most of their time listening. The number of times you've posted in a given topic is not a leaderboard; it's a record of failing to communicate.

Consider the difference between a chat room and a discussion. Chat is a never-ending flow of disconnected, stream of consciousness sentences that you can occasionally dip your toes in to get the temperature of the water, and that's about it. Discussion is the process of lobbing paragraphs back and forth that results in an evolution of positions as your mutual understanding becomes more nuanced. We hope.

The Ars Banana Experiment

Ars Technica ran a little experiment in 2011. When they posted Guns at home more likely to be used stupidly than in self defense, embedded in the last sentence of the seventh paragraph of the article was this text:

If you have read this far, please mention Bananas in your comment below. We're pretty sure 90% of the respondants to this story won't even read it first.

The first person to do this is on page 3 of the resulting discussion, comment number 93. Or as helpfully visualized by Brandon Gorrell:

Plenty of talking, but how many people actually read up to paragraph 7 (of 11) of the source article before they rushed to comment on it?

The Slate Experiment

In You Won't Finish This Article, Farhad Manjoo dares us to read to the end.

Only a small number of you are reading all the way through articles on the Web. I’ve long suspected this, because so many smart-alecks jump in to the comments to make points that get mentioned later in the piece.

But most of us won't.

He collected a bunch of analytics data based on real usage to prove his point:

These experiments demonstrate that we don't need to incentivize talking. There's far too much talking already. We badly need to incentivize listening.

And online, listening = reading. That old school program from my childhood was right, so deeply fundamentally right. Reading. Reading Is Fundamental.

Let's say you're interested in World War II. Who would you rather have a discussion with about that? The guy who just skimmed the Wikipedia article, or the gal who read the entirety of The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich?

This emphasis on talking and post count also unnecessarily penalizes lurkers. If you've posted five times in the last 10 years, but you've read every single thing your community has ever written, I can guarantee that you, Mr. or Mrs. Lurker, are a far more important part of that community's culture and social norms than someone who posted 100 times in the last two weeks. Value to a community should be measured every bit by how much you've read as much as how much you talked.

So how do we encourage reading, exactly?

You could do crazy stuff like require commenters to enter some fact from the article, or pass a basic quiz about what the article contained, before allowing them to comment on that article. On some sites, I think this would result in a huge improvement in the quality of the comments. It'd add friction to talking, which isn't necessarily a bad thing, but it's a negative, indirect way of forcing reading by denying talking. Not ideal.

I have some better ideas.

  1. Remove interruptions to reading, primarily pagination.

    Here's a radical idea: when you get to the bottom of the page, load the next damn page automatically. Isn't that the most natural thing to want when you reach the end of the page, to read the next one? Is there any time that you've ever been on the Internet reading an article, reached the bottom of page 1, and didn't want to continue reading? Pagination is nothing more than an arbitrary barrier to reading, and it needs to die a horrible death.

    There are sites that go even further here, such as The Daily Beast, which actually loads the next article when you reach the end of the one you are currently reading. Try it out and see what you think. I don't know that I'd go that far (I like to pick the next thing I read, thanks very much), but it's interesting.

  2. Measure read times and display them.

    What I do not measure, I cannot display as a number next to someone's name, and cannot properly encourage. In Discourse we measure how long each post has been visible in the browser for every (registered) user who encounters that post. Read time is a key metric we use to determine who we trust, and the best posts that people do actually read. If you aren't willing to visit a number of topics and spend time actually listening to us, why should we talk to you – or trust you.

    Forget clicks, forget page loads, measure read time! We've been measuring read times extensively since launch in 2013 and it turns out we're in good company: Medium and Upworthy both recently acknowledged the intrinsic power of this metric.

  3. Give rewards for reading.

    I know, that old saw, gamification, but if you're going to reward someome, do it for the right things and the right reasons. For example, we created a badge for reading to the end of a long 100+ post topic. And our trust levels are based heavily on how often people are returning and how much they are reading, and virtually not at all on how much they post.

    To feel live reading rewards in action, try this classic New York Times Article. There's even a badge for reading half the article!

  4. Update in real time.

    Online we tend to read these conversations as they're being written, as people are engaging in live conversations. So if new content arrives, figure out a way to dynamically rez it in without interrupting people's read position. Preserve the back and forth, real time dynamic of an actual conversation. Show votes and kudos and likes as they arrive. If someone edits their post, bring that in too. All of this goes a long way toward making a stuffy old debate feel like a living, evolving thing versus a long distance email correspondence.

These are strategies I pursued with Discourse, because I believe Reading Is Fundamental. Not just in grade school, but in your life, in my life, in every aspect of online community. To the extent that Discourse can help people learn to be better listeners and better readers – not just more talkative – we are succeeding.

If you want to become a true radical, if you want to have deeper insights and better conversations, spend less time talking and more reading.

Update: There's a CBC interview with me on the themes covered in this article.

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