'please don't use abusive language'
#1
Posted 2016-October-29, 12:41
i don't think it's bbo's job to tell me how to communicate with people with whom i have real life relationships.
i suspect because the staff are largely american, the bar is set quite low in terms of what gets filtered.
#2
Posted 2016-October-29, 13:17
#4
Posted 2016-October-30, 04:13
661_Pete, on 2016-October-30, 03:11, said:
because in real life i don't talk to my friends in a manner which would be permitted by bbo. perhaps you employ a different lexicon to me. that's fine, but if my friends and i happily engage in a more coarse discussion in a private setting (and you can't get any more private than a private message), is it anyone else's business?
#5
Posted 2016-October-30, 06:47
I didn't even know there was a swear filter in the chatline, but if so, it's there for a reason. It stays. End of.
Anyway, fear not: you're going on my Ignore list henceforth, so you needn't be troubled by any further comments of mine, on your posts.
eagles123, on 2016-October-29, 13:17, said:
#6
Posted 2016-October-30, 06:54
We'll try to improve things, but it's not very high prio and this filter will not get much smarter in the near future.
#7
Posted 2016-October-30, 07:26
661_Pete, on 2016-October-30, 06:47, said:
Wow. Overreact much?
#8
Posted 2016-October-30, 09:49
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#9
Posted 2016-October-30, 17:15
661_Pete, on 2016-October-30, 06:47, said:
I didn't even know there was a swear filter in the chatline, but if so, it's there for a reason. It stays. End of.
Anyway, fear not: you're going on my Ignore list henceforth, so you needn't be troubled by any further comments of mine, on your posts.
I thought partners were not allowed to chat to each other privately, when at play.
i'm curious which other behaviour you'd like to ban people from doing in the privacy of their own wherevers because they can't be trusted not to do the same in other settings.
sadly you won't be reading this to reply.
#11
Posted 2016-October-31, 04:34
Kaitlyn S, on 2016-October-30, 17:30, said:
Well. Seeing as you've revealed to me what I chose to 'hide', I suppose I'd better reply to you at least, for two reasons (1) you asked me to, and (2) I have more respect for you.
Believe me, I know perfectly well from my own experience that the habit of swearing proliferates, with some people. Maybe it doesn't apply to the person whom I censured, above: I just don't know about specific individuals. I was generalising. Is that always wrong?
The one example which I was the 'victim' of, here on BBO, actually rather upset me. It was right 'out of the blue'. And I think that the perpetrator, if questioned about it, might very well plead "I only swear to my friends". Let him try it on! I am not his friend!
Say I'm wrong if you like. I suppose people will never agree on all this.
As to my decision to manage 'ignores', well that's a personal matter. Perhaps I shouldn't have made it public, but I was mightily angry when I posted. I'm not the only one!
Finally, if people really want to include profanities, surely there are easy ways around it! Just write "f***" or whatever takes your mood. FFS!!
#12
Posted 2016-October-31, 05:17
I don't expect BBO to protect my sensitivities. How are they to know what I like or don't like? In my native language, words related to sexual activity and certain body parts are not that insulting, while words related to mental health might well be, depending on context of course.
If I don't like someone's behaviour I can just mark them as enemies.
#13
Posted 2016-October-31, 22:05
Modern taboos and customs are peculiar and paradoxical:
- To avoid offence, we must to use ugly euphemisms and clumsy syntactic distortions, especially when we refer to Islam, gender, sexual-preference, race, and disability -- in the rare instances, when we are permitted to discuss such matters, openly. We frown on moral judgements.
- In most contexts, however, gratuitous profanity, blasphemy, and insolence are the norm. Words lose precision. Grammar grows sloppy. When grasping for expression, some people use fillers such as "Actually", "You know" or "Like" but most rely on a peppering of obscenities.
#14
Posted 2016-November-01, 04:06
661_Pete, on 2016-October-31, 04:34, said:
When a poster used obscenities towards me and threatened me with rape it was also out of the blue. Perhaps it is just a matter of a deranged person looking for a place to direct his aggression.
In my case, I thought that BBO would pursue prosecution, but the poster was not, to my knowledge, even banned.
#15
Posted 2016-November-01, 05:25
Vampyr, on 2016-November-01, 04:06, said:
#16
Posted 2016-November-01, 06:19
#17
Posted 2016-November-02, 09:16
nige1, on 2016-November-01, 05:25, said:
In the case of little kids, obviously The blame rests squarely on the parents' shoulders. The key word is respect, and some children are not taught to respect their parents or indeed anyone. Respect should be the default attitude when dealing with anyone. Naturally, a person's behaviour can cause one to lose respect for that person, but one shoul still strive to treat them, and speak to them, civilly.
On the Internet, people are at a remove from those they are addressing, which somehow causes the normal rules of respect and civility to fly out the window. For example, people will write things they would never say out loud in public.
But the opposite should be true, especially on a public forum such as this one. Anyone can read what you posted -- friends, acquaintances, strangers, current and future employers, even your grandparents. So a good guideline of what is acceptable to post online is to write nothing that you would be uncomfortable saying in front of your grandma.
#18
Posted 2016-November-02, 14:22
Vampyr, on 2016-November-02, 09:16, said:
So maybe hrothgar's grandma has a mouth like a truck driver?
BTW, I assumed the OP was talking about the chat filter in the BBO app, not the forum, since it referred to friend relationships.
#19
Posted 2016-November-02, 18:47
barmar, on 2016-November-02, 14:22, said:
BTW, I assumed the OP was talking about the chat filter in the BBO app, not the forum, since it referred to friend relationships.
I do not know Richard;s grandma. My grandma would not be proud of everything he said in these forums but I think she would love him.
Some people get offended by curse words that they hear everyday and prefer to pretend like it does not exists in the language, even when it is not use to insult/offend/attack anyone.
Some people get offended when an admin of both BBF and BBO gives negative reference to a group of working people of a specific job. Ironically, a group of people that he probably has little or no clue about.
OH! But we can not use the 'F' word when talking to our best friend in private. That is a NO NO! TOO bad word!
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#20
Posted 2016-November-03, 01:18
barmar, on 2016-November-02, 14:22, said:
True but the thread has moved on.