
observer230
New Member
- Oct 10, 2020
- 1
Hey all,
I'm a new member. I'm not quite sure this is the right forum for this discussion (please LMK!).
A little about me: I'm a prominent advocate in the content moderation space. My scholarship primarily focuses on protecting communities like this one and ensuring that the Internet continues to allow for free and open expression.
Observation: I joined this community purely to learn more, observe, help aid my advocacy efforts (and honestly, even personally blow off some steam when it comes to my own mental health). I'm working on a paper about SS and other similar groups that tend to get kicked off "mainstream" social media. Today, I shared some of that work and current research with my academic community. Someone from that group just informed me though that it created an incredibly uncomfortable situation/conversation and that I was a "cautionary tale" for future discussions (this individual noted they never wanted to put others in the situation I put folks in today). Maybe this is more deserving of the "venting" label but I'm frustrated. It sometimes feels like we pretend to care about mental health when it "looks good" to care about it but no one ever wants to have the hard conversations behind closed doors. I'm not sure how Internet services are supposed to make progress on this front (creating safe and inclusive spaces for this kind of speech/content) when the topic is so taboo even for an academic discussion.
I provided a quick trigger warning for my community today before I presented on this topic. I guess that wasn't enough. I'm curious how you all navigate these conversations outside of this online community. Do you talk openly about this topics with others? Perhaps I'm in the wrong here. IDK feeling really thrown off right now.
I'm a new member. I'm not quite sure this is the right forum for this discussion (please LMK!).
A little about me: I'm a prominent advocate in the content moderation space. My scholarship primarily focuses on protecting communities like this one and ensuring that the Internet continues to allow for free and open expression.
Observation: I joined this community purely to learn more, observe, help aid my advocacy efforts (and honestly, even personally blow off some steam when it comes to my own mental health). I'm working on a paper about SS and other similar groups that tend to get kicked off "mainstream" social media. Today, I shared some of that work and current research with my academic community. Someone from that group just informed me though that it created an incredibly uncomfortable situation/conversation and that I was a "cautionary tale" for future discussions (this individual noted they never wanted to put others in the situation I put folks in today). Maybe this is more deserving of the "venting" label but I'm frustrated. It sometimes feels like we pretend to care about mental health when it "looks good" to care about it but no one ever wants to have the hard conversations behind closed doors. I'm not sure how Internet services are supposed to make progress on this front (creating safe and inclusive spaces for this kind of speech/content) when the topic is so taboo even for an academic discussion.
I provided a quick trigger warning for my community today before I presented on this topic. I guess that wasn't enough. I'm curious how you all navigate these conversations outside of this online community. Do you talk openly about this topics with others? Perhaps I'm in the wrong here. IDK feeling really thrown off right now.
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