From: Karl Lui Barrus <klbarrus@owlnet.rice.edu>
The attitude expressed by the individual on io.com shows a problem we will have in educating others - "anonymous posts CAN destroy a civil conversation". Yes, maybe so, but in my experience on mailing lists, bbses, etc. I've noticed that "flame wars" and "anonymous posts" have NO correlation, and are quite independent of one another.
Since I've seen "flame wars" on systems with absolutely no anonymous posting facilities (or none that were used), I conclude that civil conversation is destroyed by strongly held differences in opinions (or some other factor I can't pin down).
I'll second that. The main menaces against "civil conversations" have been, on Netnews, flame wars and wars between two individuals. After the first few messages, the flamers and the opponents are clearly identified. They are usually proudly posting under their usual Name (as they are all fighting for their Reputation, and for establishing their opponent's Incompetence) (... do we recognize anybody yet :-? ) I actually can't remember such a war involving an anonymous poster (as in "using penet or similar"). What destroys discussions (and forces people to leave them...) is the tendency of threads to start genuine, and to end as flame wars. Certainly, for-money systems would tend to shorten flame wars.. On the other hand in the few discussions against anonymous posting, some people were arguing for "accountability" who were clearly forgetting the proportion of people who use handles or pseudonyms as their default setup. These are not anonymous per se, but in the current fickle netnews, what's the difference? (BlackNet would make a difference :-) Only in the most outrageous fraud cases (votes, forgery...) are pseudonyms tracked back to their account holder. Solution (1/2 kidding): Build an anonymous remailer that gives a choice of "obviously anonymous output", or "random pseudonym output". You could even take the pseudonym from the phone book, or from the names of the people who used the newsgroup in the past :-) Pierre. pierre@shell.portal.com