I'm curious, now that Mastodon is better at loading missing replies, have you noticed a decrease in mansplaining?
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@FenTiger Ah, right, forgot to account for people who never deal with this and therefore don't believe it exists as a problem!
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I'm curious, now that Mastodon is better at loading missing replies, have you noticed a decrease in mansplaining?
The technical feature of seeing more posts searched-for and loaded *after* I opened an initial post is welcomed
"More replies found SHOW X"
That this somehow translates into a defense against the dreaded "Reply Guy" is utterly irrelevant
Mastodon is *not* a private chat room
If people are going to post public posts -- often using the most common hashtags -- they need to expect replies
Then, the idea that everyone *must* scroll diligently through *all* previous posts to make absolutely that one is not duplicating a reply made two hours earlier -- really?
Really?
Take a deep breath, people
Maybe the world is *not* exactly as you want it to be
You'll survive -- I promise
* * *
There
I replied
Happy?
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I'm curious, now that Mastodon is better at loading missing replies, have you noticed a decrease in mansplaining?
I don't know if this counts as mansplaining but there's been less repetition of replies in answer to questions. People are able to see others have already posted an answer.
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@stefan I think they like hearing themselves speak, metaphorically speaking (the speaking of which in turn is also metaphorical).
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I'm curious, now that Mastodon is better at loading missing replies, have you noticed a decrease in mansplaining?
@stefan It's not just mansplaining any longer. There is lot of bikesplaining and fossplaining (eg. from my side), and, Fediverse being Fediverse, there is also invevitable transplaining.
I think we should accept, that we are just federation of replyguys.
Anyway, the world which would try to train their AI on my replies is doomed. The conclusion? Anything is better, than #aisplaining !
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I don't know if this counts as mansplaining but there's been less repetition of replies in answer to questions. People are able to see others have already posted an answer.
@FediThing Yes, I feel like there should be a proper study that takes into account subtleties like this.
But at least the poll might get a conversation started.
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@miblo I like that! Something like what Discourse does (and probably other forums) when you start a new topic.
cc @scottjenson
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@miblo I like that! Something like what Discourse does (and probably other forums) when you start a new topic.
cc @scottjenson
@stefan @fluffy @scottjenson Oh nice one, I didn't know anyone already does this. Must check out Discourse.
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@stefan @fluffy @scottjenson Oh nice one, I didn't know anyone already does this. Must check out Discourse.
@miblo Yes, here's a screenshot of what this might look like on a forum: https://meta.discourse.org/t/how-do-i-enable-similar-topics-for-my-community/245479?tl=en
Pretty neat!
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@miblo Yes, here's a screenshot of what this might look like on a forum: https://meta.discourse.org/t/how-do-i-enable-similar-topics-for-my-community/245479?tl=en
Pretty neat!
@stefan @fluffy @scottjenson Ah thanks, yeah, it looks sweet and just what I've had in mind this whole time! Surely it'd be a game-changer for us in microblogging…
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I'm curious, now that Mastodon is better at loading missing replies, have you noticed a decrease in mansplaining?
@stefan I'm sorry for anyone that's been patronized because of their gender. Condescension based on assumptions is wrong.
My understanding is that mansplaining is explaining because you assume a woman doesn't know something. I don't dispute that happens.
What frustrates me though is the double standard I keep seeing. For example if I see someone writing something I don't agree with I tend to over explain. Not because of any gender but because I have opinions and want to ensure I explain what I mean. That's just how I communicate with everyone.
But I've watched the term get used here as a catch-all for any time a man disagrees with or corrects a woman. Sometimes warranted, sometimes not. And it builds this fear of even participating in discussions with women because your reasoning gets ignored in favor of assumed sexist intent.
If we're assuming someone's motivation based on their gender without evidence, how is that different from the problem we're trying to solve?
Let's put a stop to sexism. On both sides.
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R ActivityRelay shared this topic
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@stefan @fluffy @scottjenson Ah thanks, yeah, it looks sweet and just what I've had in mind this whole time! Surely it'd be a game-changer for us in microblogging…
@miblo @stefan @scottjenson Yeah I have mixed feelings about Discourse in general but some of its UX stuff is genuinely great.
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I'm curious, now that Mastodon is better at loading missing replies, have you noticed a decrease in mansplaining?
As a typical male I don't know if I'm sufficiently equipped to detect mansplaining. So, not sure.
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@stefan I'm sorry for anyone that's been patronized because of their gender. Condescension based on assumptions is wrong.
My understanding is that mansplaining is explaining because you assume a woman doesn't know something. I don't dispute that happens.
What frustrates me though is the double standard I keep seeing. For example if I see someone writing something I don't agree with I tend to over explain. Not because of any gender but because I have opinions and want to ensure I explain what I mean. That's just how I communicate with everyone.
But I've watched the term get used here as a catch-all for any time a man disagrees with or corrects a woman. Sometimes warranted, sometimes not. And it builds this fear of even participating in discussions with women because your reasoning gets ignored in favor of assumed sexist intent.
If we're assuming someone's motivation based on their gender without evidence, how is that different from the problem we're trying to solve?
Let's put a stop to sexism. On both sides.
@watchfulcitizen Yeah, the term does sometimes get used as a shorthand for different kinds of unsolicited replies.
And I do agree that social situations can get a bit tricky to navigate, especially online.
At the same time, when we see a complete stranger get something wrong on the internet, do we need to let them know? Maybe if it's a life-threatening misinformation, sure.
I for one have had a much better experience myself after I realized that it's fine to let people be wrong sometimes.
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I'm curious, now that Mastodon is better at loading missing replies, have you noticed a decrease in mansplaining?
@stefan I have little patience for dickwads so I block when needed. Meanwhile, not noticing any changes.
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@stefan I have little patience for dickwads so I block when needed. Meanwhile, not noticing any changes.
@wendinoakland Ah, sorry you have to deal with that!
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@wendinoakland Ah, sorry you have to deal with that!
@stefan It’s a regular feature of “being female on the internet”. See: “Men Explain Things to Me” (Rebecca Solnit)
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@watchfulcitizen Yeah, the term does sometimes get used as a shorthand for different kinds of unsolicited replies.
And I do agree that social situations can get a bit tricky to navigate, especially online.
At the same time, when we see a complete stranger get something wrong on the internet, do we need to let them know? Maybe if it's a life-threatening misinformation, sure.
I for one have had a much better experience myself after I realized that it's fine to let people be wrong sometimes.
@stefan Fair point about picking battles. I could be better at that.
My concern is when offering a perspective or disagreeing gets dismissed based on gender assumptions rather than content or tone. If cross-gender discussion becomes something to avoid because of that risk, we end up with less dialogue, not more equality.
Maybe the answer is judging behavior on its own merits instead of who's involved?
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@stefan Fair point about picking battles. I could be better at that.
My concern is when offering a perspective or disagreeing gets dismissed based on gender assumptions rather than content or tone. If cross-gender discussion becomes something to avoid because of that risk, we end up with less dialogue, not more equality.
Maybe the answer is judging behavior on its own merits instead of who's involved?
@watchfulcitizen Yeah, you're not wrong, but also, trying to look at things from the perspective of someone who often deals with men jumping into their mentions thinking they're being helpful when they're not, I can see them not having a ton of patience left.
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@stefan It’s a regular feature of “being female on the internet”. See: “Men Explain Things to Me” (Rebecca Solnit)
@wendinoakland Well, I definitely appreciate your, and other marginalized people's resilience and patience!
