re: on forum disruption
The best solutions are bottom-up solutions: solutions in which individuals can make choices about what they wish to see, but can't impose those choices on others.
I agree with this, I really do. Nevertheless, I think this characterization incomplete in two ways. First, let us stipulate that for the near future the notion of the named group, whose members are all expected, more or less, to share in a common discourse, will remain useful and desirable. The sharing of discourse creates a group history, which in turn creates a group identity. The lack of completeness in Mike's characterization is to recognize that group participation is not completely individualistic, that to gain the benefits of a common discourse it is necessary to participate in that discourse by saying one thing and not saying another. Stricture creates structure. The bottom up solution is not merely the elimination of stricture but rather to increase the ability to choose structure. In a truly free society one has the ability to limit one's freedom for whatever purpose desired. Cypherpunks is like this. I have no theoretical problem with turning off list disrupters, although I do consider it a grave action. It is the practice of the list to broadcast anything requested to be broadcast, yet this does not make this forum a public forum. Each person on the list has transferred, _de facto_, some agency to the maintainer (that's me) about how the list will operate. The second incompleteness is remedied by explictly referring to transferability of preference. One thing the extropians list software does right is to allow filtering at the server; this is a transfer of preference and can be an economic optimization. Bottom-up solutions are incomplete to the extent that they require the solution to remain at the bottom. Eric