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   Message 134 of 677   
   Moderator to All   
   Netiquette   
   01 Mar 12 00:00:12   
   
                       Communication Etiquette in Modern Media   
                                   Author *Unknown*   
      
   When involved in communications, especially in computer echos, awareness   
   of certain concepts make the activity more fun for everyone.  Two main   
   concepts stand out, primarily because people tend to REACT to negative   
   messages with negative responses.   
      
   1. Impersonal responses to personal attacks:  Computer communications   
   are almost always written.  Due to the fact that words carry only   
   limited information, the noise to information ratio can become very   
   dense, with a sentence the sender considered very mild becoming a   
   hurricane of emotion in the mind of the receiver.  Therefore try to keep   
   personal nouns and pronouns, like "you" and "your" out of any message   
   that may cause disagreement among the other members of the echo or net.   
      
   If necessary to express disagreement with an idea, couching the words of   
   your message in impersonal terms works best.   
      
   Bad response:   
   "I think you are stupid to think motherboards should just be thrown away   
   rather than fixed." This message may well cause the receiver to respond   
   with some nasty reply, clogging the net with negative personal argument.   
      
   Better response:   
   "I have always found that motherboards could be fixed."  This presents   
   an opposite view, but the receiver will less likely consider it a   
   personal attack.   
      
   If someone disagrees with you personally, or even attacks you viciously,   
   you have three options on an Echo or Net.  You can simply ignore the   
   message rather than responding.  You can respond in an impersonal but   
   polite way, not letting the attack affect you at all.  Or you can send a   
   message to the Moderator, expressing your unease at the tone or attack   
   of the message you received and let the moderator take care of it.   
      
   2. Understanding the Twit:  Occasionally, someone joins a net or echo   
   with only one interest, to cause as much uproar as possible. They may   
   simply personally attack every person on the net, or sometimes they   
   attack every idea or subject thread they find, for the same purpose.   
   They are often racist, sexist, nationist, or just plain stupid. If the   
   rest of the members of the net refuse to communicate with the twit, s/he   
   will usually lose interest and stop posting.   
      
   Sometimes normally reasonable people become twits without realizing it,   
   taking some argument or disagreement past the point of courtesy and   
   drawing in others.  The discipline of electronic communication really   
   requires a more detached viewpoint than normal in other communication   
   medias, because the usual subliminal undercurrents of communication one   
   receives in other two-way mediums do not exist.  Sarcasm and humor can   
   easily become misunderstood, and cause unintended ill feelings.   
      
   In electronic mediums, honesty, tact, and straightforwardness are of   
   great significance.  Without them, communication can stop cold.   
      
   In dealing with twits, especially the more obvious ones, there are five   
   common sense rules to always use:   
      
   Echoer's Common Sense Rule #1 (ECSR1): If possible, never READ twit's   
   posts. Step over manure or your shoe will stink.   
      
   Echoer's Common Sense Rule #2 (ECSR2): Never ANSWER a twit's posts!!!!!   
   Stirring manure makes it stink worse.   
      
   Echoer's Common Sense Rule #3 (ECSR3): Never QUOTE a twit's posts!!!!!   
   That's like smearing manure on your friends!   
      
   Echoer's Common Sense Rule #4 (ESCR4): Never MENTION a twit to another   
   echoer!!!  That's like sharing a manure sandwich!   
      
   Echoer's Common Sense Rule #5 (ECSR5): LET THE MODERATOR HANDLE THE   
   TWIT!!!!!  He has the right kind of manure shovel.   
      
   With these few hints, communication over computers can become a true joy   
   instead of a cold hassle.   
      
      
      
    * Origin: (1:3634/12)   

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