On Wednesday 17. January 2018 11.56.21 Daniel Pocock wrote:
One thing that comes to mind: are there browser plugins and Thunderbird email plugins that can help people avoid visiting or linking to things like Facebook, Meetup, Twitter and Doodle? I'm not talking about giving electric shocks through the keyboard, maybe just a popup alert would be enough. This could be a far more effective way of helping members of the community improve their habits and it can step in just at the moment when they really need it. The reality is, many people don't deliberately do these things and they would change with just a little bit of help.
It seems like a niche problem, really, targeting people who know that using Facebook and friends can be problematic, but who make other people use these services for the usual reasons of "convenience", "popularity", and so on. (The distinction between going along with someone's Doodle invitation and actively sending one out to others is important here.)
If people are reaching for proprietary services instead of using something that is free and open, and if they know that they should be using the latter instead of the former, particularly because they advocate things like Free Software to others, then is it not just a case of self-discipline and having some ability to reflect on one's own image and integrity? If habits are so deeply ingrained, then might they also need to reflect on why this is?
Perhaps the free alternatives need improvement, for example. Or perhaps people feel that they cannot readily convince others to break their own habits. Perhaps they feel bad making a point that might be considered "ideological" (even though it is sound).
I participate in some forums where newcomers can occasionally be seen linking out to Facebook. I could understand that asking people not to do that might be seen as unkind, given that for some people Facebook is their gateway to the Internet (sadly and disturbingly enough) and I would be perceived as lecturing them. They might not have given their use of Facebook a second thought because, amongst other things, "surely everyone is on it".
But then again, the whole point of such forums is to have a place that people fully commit to in their collaboration, and if people choose to post stuff elsewhere and then expect others to go there to get a complete picture of a discussion or collaboration, then they undermine those forums. That can upset the people who set such forums up, partly because it starts to look like people are just using them to get what they want and not give anything back.
(There are also interesting observations to be made about eBay, and how that can be a harmful influence within the scene in question and on those forums, too. When it seems like people are using a resource as an advertising medium to make more money, that can really focus the mind around ethics, rules, and what is considered acceptable behaviour.)
So, why is it that Free Software advocates want to use proprietary services? Are they dissatisfied with free and open solutions for a good reason? Do they need to set such things up and so see them as a distraction? Do they have a disagreement with the developers of such solutions at some level? Or are they just unaware that solutions exist for their needs?
This last issue is perhaps the only thing I can think of where a plugin as described might be genuinely helpful, but it seems to me that addressing these issues is a lot more constructive than administering a slap on the wrist, even if that is what some people might want.
Paul