Zibb

Brian DipertEDN Senior Technical Editor Brian Dipert exposes, analyzes and
opines on diverse topics in technology. Follow the Brian's Brain Twitter feed at www.twitter.com/BrianzBrain.



   Advertisement

Profile

RSS Feed

  • Add this blog to your RSS newsreader!

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Most Commented On

Archives

By Category

Consumer Electronics Design Articles

Blog

Monday, October 20, 2008

Preferences And Reinforcements: Libel, Slander And Rage In The Internet Age

Oct 20 2008 10:01AM | Permalink |Comments (8) |


After publishing Friday's editorial on the upsides of cultivating a flexible mind on issues in engineering and bigger-picture life, I remembered another recent story I wanted to share. Three weeks ago, I mentioned that as a means of exploring alternative distribution (i.e. Internet-only) and compensation (i.e. advertising-supported) schemes for movie content, I'd downloaded Michael Moore's latest documentary, Slacker Uprising. I intentionally took great care (and still take great care) to not reveal if I had an opinion on the controversial director and his work, and if so what that opinion might be. Almost immediately, however, I was taken to task both publicly and privately by a number of readers in the 'Moore detractor' camp (one of whom later apologized for going off-topic and politicizing a tech blog...thank you again for that, Bill).

What I quickly realized (obvious in retrospect but not the time) is that whether the topic is Michael Moore or anything else for that matter, folks who disagree with the message or messenger (or both) are inclined to completely discard it, absent any examination whatsoever. Curiously, this lack of exposure to the supposedly offensive information doesn't seem to preclude folks from still criticizing that which they haven't seen or heard, but I digress...For these folks, simply by mentioning Michael Moore's name, I was implying support for him and his political perspectives.

That's really too bad. How can you avoid clinging to fixed views (on technology or any other topic) unless you intentionally and regularly expose yourself to perspectives that aren't aligned with your own? I make a conscious effort to regularly 'make myself uncomfortable' by exploring ideas (and the individuals spouting them) that aren't aligned with my own. Sometimes, I walk away afterwards more convinced than ever that 'I'm right'. And sometimes, healthy doubt enters my consciousness, either that my perspective is "on base" in the general sense or that I can apply it equally to all situations.

Speaking of politics, I suspect that it (along with the fiscal crisis gripping not only the United States but also now spreading to the rest of the world) is behind the conspicuously increasing amount of bile being tossed my way of late in private emails and voicemails, along with public comments left on blog posts and online articles. Folks are angry and frustrated at big-picture issues of which they have little personal influence, so they anonymously redirect the negative energy elsewhere. It's gotten so bad that YouTube now offers an optional (at least for now) audio preview of comments you're about to post, so that you can listen to (and reconsider before it's too late) what you're about to state to the world. Google's Mail Goggles serves an analogous function for email.

Nearly twelve years in this job has encouraged me to grow a fairly thick layer of skin, so most of the time I can handle the heat. I just 'don my asbestos underwear', endure the flames, and move on. But one particular category of commenter and comment, I confess, continues to raise my ire. These are the folks who, if they disagree with a stance I've taken on a particular topic, knee-jerk accuse me of editorial bias. I at least hope that if they were to ever meet me face-to-face (versus the incognito aspect of 'On The Internet, Nobody Knows You're A Dog'), they'd have the clarity (or perhaps timidity) to not repeat the same allegations.

But I also hope that they've under-estimated just how important (and increasingly rare) impartiality is in my line of work, how much time and effort I've spent (and continue to spend) cultivating a reputation for objectivity, and how easily one's repute in this regard can be tarnished by false allegations. And I hope that if they see this writeup, they'll reconsider their behaviour going forward. I certainly wouldn't (anonymously or not) stroll into a reader's engineering workplace and accuse him or her of incompetence, unethical behavior or some other falsehood, just because he or she and I didn't see eye-to-eye on an issue. And I aspire for you all to act in a similarly mature, non-self-centered manner.

I've been collecting various RSS feed tidbits for a while now, in a folder labeled 'Psychology'. They elaborate on the topics I've touched on in this and last Friday's posts, and I encourage you to peruse the following chronologically ordered list if, like me, you're interested in the overall subject manner:

Chill out and have a good week, everyone.


Reader Comments



at 10/20/2008 1:54:27 PM, Meredith Poor said:
Re: "Researchers Claim To Be Able To Determine Political Leaning By How Messy You Are" - I'm trying to figure out where a packrat fits on the political spectrum. I have plenty of 'neatnik' liberal friends. Only their thinking is a mess. My conservative friends are certain Obama is a terrorist, which I find peculiar for someone that would mount and sustain a year-long political campaign. The terrorists I've heard about just like bombing and shooting people.



at 10/20/2008 2:12:09 PM, Brian Dipert said:
Dear Meredith Poor, would packrat behaviour be a fear (i.e. "don't want to give anything away because you might need it someday...") response? If so, see five links up from the one you were looking at...



at 10/20/2008 2:20:46 PM, Brian Dipert said:
Dear Meredith Poor, and regarding 'Obama is a terrorist', see 'Why Myths Persist' and 'Does ideology trump facts'. To be clear, both sides are guilty of such oversimplification and stubborn clinging to long-ago-disproven stories...



at 10/20/2008 3:07:54 PM, Jonathan Williams said:
Packrat -- Absolutely. I freely admit I hang onto "stuff" that I forsee a possible use. I laugh at myself when I listen to George Carlin's "stuff" piece because I can see myself. I tend to blame my New England Yankee thriftiness upbringing (not the baseball Yankee, we root for the BoSox) instead of fear. Perhaps fear of spending money on something I just threw out last week. I like to think of myself as an original environmentalist because we never threw out something that still had "life" in it. Even then, we would salvage the good bits from it before it went to the dump.



at 10/20/2008 3:15:59 PM, Brian Dipert said:
Dear Jonathan Williams, I tend towards the packrat side of the spectrum, too ;-) Comparable to my father, I suppose, but not NEAR as bad as HIS father. Maybe it's a watch-and-learn parental pass-down phenomenon, at least in part...if so, I'm glad to see its hold loosening generation-to-generation. Then again, maybe I'm just delusional ;-)



at 10/20/2008 4:27:02 PM, DM said:
Your situation is something I have observed my whole life. I know many educated people who will not let facts get in the way of their beliefs. This applies to people on both the left and right of the political spectrum. A large long-term study shows that breastfeeding increases IQ by a quarter of a standard deviation (compared to infant formula), and women's rights groups claim it is a scheme to keep women at home. Similarly, you can listen to conservative blowhards on the radio telling you all day long that global warming is a scheme by Al Gore to have government control our lives. God forbid anyone actually study the inconvenient facts.





at 10/21/2008 6:52:52 AM, Bear said:
You are right on on this one, Brian. A free country means that we should at least listen to someone's argument, even if his opinion is opposed to our own. We can never be sure that we ourselves have THE right answer and others' opinions force us to reexamine, and if necessary modify our own ideas. Any professional worth his salt should keep an open mind.



at 10/28/2008 5:38:09 AM, arclight said:
I have to disagree with Bear in one respect. A truly free country does NOT obligate me to listen to those around me, nor should any such requirement be written into law. The freedom to speak does not guarantee that anyone anywhere has to listen, or support / agree with the speaker. It only guarantees the right to speak.

That being said, however, Bear''s statement illustrates that the parameters of our behavior should NOT be set only by what is Earthly-lawful or not. In the Bible, James writes (James 1:19-20), "My dear brothers, take note of this: Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry, for man’s anger does not bring about the righteous life that God desires." Contrast that with the sites that Brian pointed us to. How many of them used one set of data to prove an entire universe of conditions (sloppy thinking)? Additionally, how many of them deliberately let go of their emotions to demonize someone they disagreed with, masquerading that loss of control as "expressing themselves freely" (childish and evil behavior)?

Bear is absolutely right about professionals keeping an open mind. I''ll take that a few steps further: (a) Adults are ruthless in the pursuit of truth, and fire their own opinions in the same hot furnace of logic and fact-gathering as they do everyone else''s. (b) Adults don''t wear their freedom to speak as an Uzi and blast away whenever something offends them, even though they ARE free to speak. (c) Adults maintain self-control and start from a basis of true humility (two concepts that seem to have fallen into disuse in this self-expressive, "in touch with my feelings" world).

I''m not perfect at this, and neither is any of you, but aren''t those the goals that we should be aiming toward, particularly for those of us who have any interest in that "righteous life that God desires"?



Post a comment



Display Name

Change Image
Before submitting this form, please type the characters displayed above.
Note the letters are NOT case sensitive.


ADVERTISEMENT

©1997-2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

Please visit these other Reed Business sites