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comment by Kaius
Kaius  ·  4229 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: What's your online persona, and how does it differ from your meatspace identity?

For the most part I'm pretty passive online, I dont usually post a lot in discussion forums even though I read huge amounts of them. This also means I don't generally get involved in flamewars at all.

Normally I see a comment or post I find interesting and consider writing a reply (like this one), I then start typing a short reply (like I'm doing now) which vaguely expresses my thoughts, I normally write, revise, edit, read, reread re-edit the post several times before hitting submit (like I am doing with this comment). Once I get to this point there is a 90% chance I will say 'screw it', delete the post without submitting and move on. (If you are reading this then you know it was one of the lucky survivors that made it.)

In real life I'm pretty laid back so perhaps that explains my ghostly online persona.





sounds_sound  ·  4229 days ago  ·  link  ·  

You've described my MO as of late pretty succinctly here. I find that writing a comment, with a series of edits, helps me to understand how I personally feel about a particular topic. Once I've ironed out the creases of an idea in my mind, it's less important to me that other people hear it.

supertod  ·  4229 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I couldn't agree more. Often I write out a large response to a comment, then feel no need to submit it once I've written it. It just helps clarify ideas I have. Almost deleted this one.

user-inactivated  ·  4226 days ago  ·  link  ·  

That's funny, I go exactly the opposite way. I write out a response, and if it's nice and clear I post it because it feels like an idea worth sharing. Better clarified the idea, the more I feel justified in sharing it. Every once in a while, I'll type out a long-winded response, realize 75 percent of the way through that it's either inane or just based on some huge fallacy I didn't see before typing, and then delete it.

Sometimes those are my favorite responses, come to think of it, because they end up re-shaping some basic assumption I'd held for a long time. But yeah, the ones I discard are the ones I don't think are worth sharing.

sirwfc718  ·  4228 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I also do the same in many cases where large responses already exist and my assertions would probably only serve to suffocate the airwaves with needless signals.

Kaius  ·  4229 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Once I go to the effort of typing a good response I realise that I don't care if others read it or not.

    "I'm perfectly happy to let someone be wrong on the Internet." Kaius (2013)