Can I use salty, expletive-laden language on Stack Exchange sites, like Q*Bert?
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I'll stop using expletives when you clean up the rampant sexism I'm complaining about while using them. Offensiveness doesn't lie in a particular set of words. Nothing I can type is as creepy as two guys suggesting you take teaching jobs to ogle your female students. Human moderator intervention at least solves the problem that my comments are being deleted just for containing a word you can hear on prime-time TV, and someone else's comments advocating coercive sexual behavior are left untouched. |
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It depends.While 'expletive' has a defined meaning, most folks are just going to break out their own personal "bad words" dictionary to make this decision. Examples of expletives that I don't think will generate a warning:
(1: a television show's made up profanity) Maybe the question should really be, "Are profanity-laced expletives allowed?" Fact is, this is a professional site and much of the professional world does not tollerate profanities of any kind, expletive or not...especially in public facing environments. I'm personally comfortable with bad words but accept that others are not. If the rule is no, I can fracking live with that. Now...the race to define that fuzzy grey line... |
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Questions about expletives are appropriate on English Stack Exchange, though using them in anger wouldn't be. |
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No.Expletives are not acceptable behavior on meta or any other Stack Overflow site. If you can't effectively communicate what you need to say without resorting to lowest common denominator cursing, then keep it to yourself. If you use expletives, you will get a warning. If you continue to use expletives, you will be placed on timed suspension. |
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Yes, but keep them to a minimumThere are some unholy things that can only be cursed. Comments are supposed to be lightweight, so there is not much point in regulating them much. Furthermore, there are people that take some innocent words as cursing. Words, are words, are words. We should keep the site tidy, but not over enforce. |
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Yes Otherwise there would be an effective swear filter. If you don't have a swear filter you cannot effectively police it. This means you end with an inconsistent policy which frustrates those who wish to swear and still offends those who dislike swearing and come across swearing that hasn't been caught. Net result being that you've only achieved irritating a bunch of people. I would suggest as a solution a "Safe" option which does simple word substitution (so people can turn it off in scenarios where the word substitution fails and ruins a bit of innocent text). This would enable those in tricky corporate scenarios to browse safely while not irritating those who like to use the full extent of the English language. |
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Yes.Expletives are great and they are a normal form of human communication used to further express emotion or emphasis. We don't need a site that caters to hypersensitive people that are still stuck in the mindset of kindergartners. Furthermore, comments were always supposed to be informal and there is a flag button right next to the comment if the comment is truly offensive, so where is the problem? If you are a real man, your profile will also contain as many expletives as possible. |
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