Are these definitions of "Unwelcoming" inconsistent?
- Cambridge:
not making a guest or visitor feel happy, comfortable, or wanted:
- Merriam Webster:
not giving pleasure to the mind or senses
- Collins:
If someone is unwelcoming, or if they behave in an unwelcoming way, they are unfriendly or hostile when you visit or approach them.
- MacMillan:
behaving in an unfriendly way because you are not pleased to see someone
- Oxford:
- Having an inhospitable or uninviting quality,
- (of a person or their expression) not friendly towards a guest or new arrival.
- Wiktionary:
Lacking in hospitality, accessibility and cordiality.
To address this:
I find comments with lots of phrasing and lots of couching and encouragement wrapping criticism to be rude and condesecending: They waste my time and I know it's insincere.
Well I personally feel the same way, but I understand that others like some sugar-coating or at least some verbosity that indicates mutual respect to go with their criticism. I don't personally consider either style, sugar coating or lack thereof, "unwelcoming".
Here's some things that are unwelcoming - based on a synthesis of the above definitions and my own moderation experience:
- ad hominem criticism (one should critique the content, not the person).
- making people feel unwanted.
- escalating back-and-forth (no-one needs to have the last word - your best improvement suggestion was probably the first one anyways.)
- putting your own ego above the quality and reputation of the site.
- rhetorical flourishes that only serve to make the commenter (and their supporting critics) feel good, such as:
- I'm not going to sugar-coat it, ...
- There's no nice way to say it, ...
- Let me google that for you...
- ... but you would have known that had you read the man page/book.
I just cleaned up a comment thread that began with something like "if you had googled... you would have found <useful link>
", to which the asker gave a nominally rude response (noting the rudeness of the first!), and the original commenter gave another rude response. I immediately deleted the two follow ups, and edited out everything but the purportedly useful link from the first.
Yes, there's an element of human judgment involved, but that's why moderators are elected.
Treat your fellow users with respect, and flag when you see behavior that isn't.
Don't respond to rudeness, just flag it.
Remember that new users will treat other users the way that they feel that you treat them.
Try to model good behavior for new users - do not demonstrate impatience. If you lose patience, please just walk away (metaphorically or even literally).
Let's all try to be more "Welcoming" - as best as we can each individually tell what that is. There is no rule against being nice. We moderators will be watching.