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What real action can one take in regards to a user display name (to distinguish from a user profile) that potentially endangers (not just "offends" - can cause them harm or damage from a third party) another user or group of users.

Before asking I tried reading some other related or relevant questions like:

from meta.stackoverflow.com:

and on meta.stackexchange.com:

But in those I mainly found opinions - and I did not find any answer as to what real action I can take. Plus I am also not sure as to where to ask this question (MetaSE, MetaSO?)

The issue I am referring to is related to at least one specific user display name and profile that has political messages and keywords embedded in its username or user display name (not only profile) which relates to a specific regime in a specific territory.

Now, the reason why I contemplated a lot before asking this question is because:

  • Although frequently visiting and working at that specific territory which it effects I am not a citizen there, not a part of that ethnicity, so that political issue is as far away from me as can possibly be

  • I am liberal enough to know and understand that I personally should not care (and on a personal level - I really don't) about other people's opinions.

On the other hand:

  • this case is about a username and not the profile. Profile page is easy to avoid - but a username appears everywhere (comments, answers, and even own profile

  • in that specific territory, the embedded words are not considered offensive (which I don't care) but potentially illegal , Harmful or even DANGEROUS

  • although I am not an integrated part of that territory on a personal level, I do have peers, colleagues and employees that I care about

  • that specific territory is known for having very efficient and rigorous internet censorship and firewall technologies

  • the situation HAS already actively effected me personally, my work, and my employees.

Unfortunately, I am not talking only about imaginary, would-be fantasy possibilities.

  • I was working with a client that is related to the government and, while browsing my own profile, that username appeared. The official that was staring with me at the screen was shocked - because of me being a "foreigner", we moved on, but with palpable tension in the air. A day later I got a notice that the contract was cancelled.

  • One of our employees has opened a question that this user(name) was involved in without taking the required precautions (Proxy-VPN-IpSpoofing), and our office immediately suffered a retaliatory 10 hour internet outage!

  • I had to purchase, install and maintain a special infrastructure only in order to be able to safely work with SE (which we use a lot naturally) - all that because of that specific username.

  • In the last few weeks, each time the specific username appears in a question or comment that is accessed from our offices, our office is promptly disconnected from the ISP for 30 minutes (and an overwhelming increase in attempt to sniff and penetrate network and devices).

I do understand (and am also happy about) the fact that SE is an apolitical website/community, and does not want to be involved in any of this, or to take any action in regards, but I feel that it is a bit unfair that one (or more) users are taking actions that can affect others that are totally innocent, passive bystanders (and I do not mean "offend" - I mean real palpable effect). I also understand that for people who are not involved in the territory, who do not work with its people, or do not know its political panorama, would not understand or care about this issue.

But, on the other hand, this issue can also potentially have a great effect on the community/website, because eventually the whole site could be banned from the territory, which would effect many other innocent users and would also be a big lost in traffic from that vast territory.

In that regard, IMHO the community must know the difference between offensive and potentially dangerous to other users.

What to do? Since one can not flag a profile or username, and the option of directly addressing the user seems to have predictable results (reading also other previous comments and discussions) and might be labeled inappropriate, I am now not sure what I have to do in regards to a real action, and how to handle this situation. Who to contact and how?

For obvious reason I do not want to specify the exact username or a link to the profile - I do not want to cause any backlash to that user, or myself. Although I am quite sure that everything is transparent enough even if not specified, if any of the SO/SE staff would want more details, I will provide them in am more direct way (not in the question/comments).

Edit after comments:

I feel I need to add some point here, after seeing the comments.

  • First of all, my plead to not post the specifics in in comments in order to avoid the exact context was edited out (not sure why).

  • I feel some members miss the difference between "insulting" or "offensive" and "harmful" or dangerous".

  • By using words like "totalitarian" and "oppressive regimes" (however might be true)- one DOES make a political statement, so it is hard understand how one, at the same time, is being apolitical.

  • I feel I must again sharpen the point of this not having to do with political "offensive" or "insulting". This has to do with the fact that one user, is deliberately, and with clear and stated intent, is trying to harm another group of users for own gain. Unfortunately, me and my employees are in the second group (of being harmed).

  • I do not think I need to get into the discussion of what is to be considered "dangerous" or "harmful" like some members suggested - and also I did not want to dramatize the original question - But me being deported , or being put on some black-list that would delay border crossings , or even being visited by some 1984-like thought police thugs , or one of my employees being held for questioning - is "dangerous" or "harmful" enough. and yes - Even an internet outage is harmful - especially when it is being done deliberately by one member of the community towards the others.

  • I do not have nothing against the specific user, their political views or stands. As I recall, the user was even helpful to me numerous times (hence their appearance on my profile page).

  • PLEASE do not turn this into a one-specific-regime-political-discussion. it is not about the right of a specific user to express his feelings or thoughts or his actions, it is about the CONSEQUENCES of these actions on other , third party , by-standers users and members of the community - who happens to live in a certain territory under certain rules ( well known to the user who exploit that ) . Maybe I used the wrong words for the title as " political" might be interchangeable with " harmful " for the intended meaning . it might take off the edge or vector of political discussion.

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  • 21
    Sounds like a perfect case for the contact us link.
    – Kevin B
    May 13, 2017 at 2:45
  • 19
    "For obvious reason I do not want to specify the exact username or a link to the profile" That's OK, it's pretty damn obvious (even before getting to your links) who exactly the user you're referring to is anyway. You didn't really have to sugarcoat the fact that the name was set up that way on purpose - that's exactly what the user wants everybody here to know.
    – BoltClock
    May 13, 2017 at 3:30
  • 13
    "while browsing my own profile , that username appeared" - I don't see where on a profile the name of another user should appear. I'm curious what name you might refer to, but respect that you don't want it to be mentioned. I'd have a closer look at your profile, to figure out the name, but am afraid to do so: The word "Obmerk" is a strong, obscene insult in my language, and I don't want to get into trouble with my employer. (Note: This comment may contain traces of irony, possibly mixed with hints about my subjective view on this topic)
    – Marco13
    May 13, 2017 at 6:05
  • 18
    @Marco13 I think the issue here is more along the lines of a user in Thailand browsing a profile named "Death to the king".. Or browsing a profile with Charlie Hebdo cartoons in Pakistan. Although I don't know how big of an issue this is, and how practical/necessary it is for us to do anything about it
    – Pekka
    May 13, 2017 at 8:02
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    @Pekka웃 My (ironic) remark referred to the difficulties that arise from ... the attempt to avoid difficulties.More serious: I'm from Germany, and the Unicode character 5350 (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swastika#Written_characters) is 卐, which is illegal here (!) - should it be banned from usernames? Also for countries where this is a symbol of luck? Of course, one has to consider that the username referred to was intended to be insulting, but it's a thin line. There are some ridiculous rules out there. Hard to obey them all...
    – Marco13
    May 13, 2017 at 14:13
  • 69
    If an oppressive regime cuts off the internet of anyone who sees certain words, I don't think the words are the problem here.
    – jwodder
    May 13, 2017 at 18:32
  • 8
    @Marco13 yes, I'm generally in the "we shouldn't cater to every oppressive regime's whim" camp too, but I suppose in very special situations (as this one might have been) there's nothing wrong with moderator intervention.
    – Pekka
    May 13, 2017 at 19:03
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    @4386427 You don't need to point out a specific user or post to talk about the actions (if any) that need to be taken in the general case.
    – DavidG
    May 13, 2017 at 19:32
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    @jwg indeed - while I might be ignorant about the extent of China's regime of political suppression, as far as I can tell the issue here is not "I might be lynched or imprisoned for visiting a page with this username", as I originally imagined, but rather just "government contacts might disapprove of me visiting a page with this username, and I might lose business as a result". Those are extremely different risks, and to frame the latter as being "endangered" - if that is indeed what Obmerk is doing - seems to me to be a gross exaggeration.
    – Mark Amery
    May 13, 2017 at 22:28
  • 22
    I get your wanting this discussion to be generalized, but you mention several actions this regime takes which makes the particular situation only really relevant to that one particular regime, because they're the only ones in the world that do this on such a large scale. It's pretty hard to generalize a conversation about all the black sheep in the room when there's only one black sheep in the room. It's causing two different conversations here - one that's generalized to political messages which don't matter because other countries don't block you for viewing it, and one that's more specific.
    – animuson StaffMod
    May 14, 2017 at 1:53
  • 6
    I really wonder what the odds of somebody writing you who shares your habit of placing spaces before every comma, full stop and brackets are...
    – idmean
    May 14, 2017 at 8:59
  • 11
    Hi, how did someone else's username appear in your profile? Forcing HTTPS should solve ISP issues. May 14, 2017 at 9:43
  • 11
    @CiroSantilli709 - The user name appears on the questions tab.
    – Kobi
    May 14, 2017 at 9:44
  • 12
    This user has changed their name multiple times. The most recent ones are variations on "July 4 incident" and "Falun Gong". Are we going to ban these particular phrases from user names? Or is the rule just going to be against anything that seems likely to annoy the Chinese authorities? Could I have the name "Falun Gong" in Roman letters as my username or is it only Chinese characters that are a problem? It's rather extreme for SO to ban all mention of a meditation and exercise program. That's what makes it different from banning racism and hate speech - the bizarreness and arbitrariness of it
    – samgak
    May 15, 2017 at 9:43
  • 18
    Reopening because: Seriously? How is this not about SE/SO?
    – user4639281
    May 15, 2017 at 15:34

13 Answers 13

87

A political statement in a display name is effectively an advertisement. It's designed to be a catchy word or phrase that captures your attention and diverts you to their profile where you can read more. Whether they're advertising politics, a product, or an Area 51 proposal, there is nothing inherently wrong with using your display name as an advertisement for whatever you'd like to advertise, and an unsolicited political statement is not much different than an unsolicited product advertisement in that regard.

The tricky part here is that sometimes those advertisements aren't in the best of interests of all users. In this particular instance, it's inhibiting some users who fall behind a much more restrictive firewall that could effectively cut off their access to our site, even if only temporarily. So the question comes down to: do we act on advertisements which cause problems?

Well, that's not as simple as it may sound. Users are right that our network tends to be very apolitical, but that does not mean politics are not allowed. It simply means we're not interested in them, don't care, and don't take a stance on most issues. Censoring an advertisement that a user has integrated into their profile is effectively asking us to take a stance. And not just that, but also analyze the situation to come to a educated conclusion about the issue. For example, you refer to the situation as harmful and dangerous, but others might strongly disagree with that sentiment and only refer to the situation as inconvenient.

Analyzing in a fair way is not an easy task to take on, and we're certainly not interested in starting any sort of queue of things to analyze. All in all, it's unfortunate some of the things you mention in your question actually occur to some of our users, but we can't consider them in making a decision like this. Considering them gives an implicit weight to the country who enacts such a policy that their policy is acceptable and that others are willing to follow and enforce to prevent those actions from occurring.

To summarize: Yes, political statements are allowed in display names. Calling for them to not be allowed there is calling for any advertisement in a display name to not be allowed, which is simply not something we can enforce adequately, or really have any interested in enforcing. We're sorry if that policy causes issues with viewing our site due to particular phrases, but keep in mind that we and the users with these display names are not the ones actually causing problems for you.

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    I really respect you cautios answer and also, what it stands for . But I find hard to agree with the demagogic-in nature point ( that others have tried to express ) that " keep in mind that we and the users with these display names are not the ones actually causing problems for you" . well, I will take it to the extreme and ask if one plants evidence to a crime in another person's property, can he really say " it is not me that caused the harm, it is the police, or the court system... " ? .this is demagogic argument.that is especially true if that person has explicitly express that goal... May 14, 2017 at 2:38
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    @ObmerkKronen Well a huge difference there is that normally if you just planted evidence somewhere, you'd still have to be investigated and proven guilty. Especially in this day and age, it's much easier to prove whether evidence was planted or not. A key difference here is that someone blocking you for simply seeing something on a screen is assuming you are guilty with no trial whatsoever. That isn't the person who planted the evidence causing the problem. A competent law enforcement agency would figure out who planted the evidence, not just immediately convict the person it was found on.
    – animuson StaffMod
    May 14, 2017 at 2:42
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    " A competent law enforcement agency would figure out " so we are now putting this in the hands of the same government officials that , by your argument, is the root of the problem ? May 14, 2017 at 2:46
  • 4
    Calling for them to not be allowed there is calling for any advertisement in a display name to not be allowed, This is a bizarre non-sequitur.
    – user663031
    May 14, 2017 at 12:47
  • 2
    an unsolicited political statement is not much different than an unsolicited product advertisement in that regard. Well, it's completely different, especially if the "statement" is intended or designed to shock or offend certain constituencies, and/or is actively harming other users of the service, not to mention when it is illegal. For instance, a username glorifying Maoist rebels in eastern India would be illegal to use or even possibly view. Whether or not we agree with such laws, it's hardly SO's role to engage in civil disobedience out of some abstract (American) principle.
    – user663031
    May 14, 2017 at 12:55
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    @torazaburo: "it's hardly SO's role to engage in civil disobedience out of some abstract (American) principle." Is it SO's role to prevent acts of civil disobedience, or to prevent statements of agreement or support? Stack Overflow is a website whose content comes from users; how is it SO's responsibility to make sure that users never post anything that could get you in trouble with local laws around the world? May 14, 2017 at 14:24
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    @torazaburo: "Google and FB do indeed have that responsibility", no they choose to do so. Why should SO choose to do so? And to what end? Which local laws/customs should they follow and which ones should they not care about? Every site that has user-created content has to deal with these questions. Why does SO's answer have to be identical to Google's? May 14, 2017 at 16:27
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    @torazaburo I don't know if you've heard, but Google actually stopped operating in China because they got tired of following local laws there, so they withdrew and let themselves get blocked. On the other hand, pretty much any site would want to remove content inciting racial hatred because why would anyone want that on their site? That's an easy law to follow because it already violates any on-site policy they'd have against hate speech. That's not a country imposing their laws, that's a service acting on very basic policies that most services have.
    – animuson StaffMod
    May 14, 2017 at 16:39
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    @torazaburo: I'm sorry, but I cannot agree with that. To promote local laws to global status is to give global sovereignty to local entities. SO may serve content to those countries, but they do not have offices within those countries. And thus, they should not be subject to those laws, nor should SO willfully subject themselves to those laws. And "everyone else" doesn't follow every local law either. Do you see a rash of webforums banning people for posting characters that the Chinese government declares illegal? What about Wikipedia; do they ban the use of those characters? May 14, 2017 at 16:40
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    I don't think Stack Overflow changing the username means it is "taking a stance" on this topic, as it's a simple practical matter: 1.2 billion people may have trouble accessing SO because of this username. It is stupid and it sucks that this is the case, but it is what it is. We shouldn't go out of way to abide by China's demands, but at the same time actively trying to bait the Chinese probably isn't great, either, especially given the real practical impact it can have on a large portion of the planet's population. May 14, 2017 at 18:05
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    @Carpetsmoker If you have a policy for one group of people, you have to have the policy for every other group of people, otherwise it is taking a stance. We can't go around saying that one group's needs matter more just because there's more of them. That's politics. As well, a user's intention behind a message simply is not relevant. That implies that a user who does not intend for something to happen is allowed to have the statement, even though it would cause the same problem. It can either be allowed or not allowed - there's no middle ground for "well, only if you're not intending this."
    – animuson StaffMod
    May 14, 2017 at 18:17
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    By that logic we should also rename the necromancer badge @animuson, since it doesn't adhere to the "be nice" policy for a small group of people. May 14, 2017 at 21:10
  • 3
    @torazaburo: "No-one is talking about banning people, where did you get that? " Possibly your answer Are these not your words? "Therefore, members who choose to engage in political speech in their handles should be requested to change them. If they refuse to do so, ..., they would be banned or their account deleted."
    – Ben Voigt
    May 16, 2017 at 4:56
  • 1
    @torazaburo: Failure to follow moderator guidance is not a bannable offense. Breaking a rule, particularly continuing to break it after the moderator has given you a chance to stop, could be. Your answer suggests making a rule that some names are not allowed, for which the punishment for (repeatedly/protractedly) breaking is a ban or deletion. But the consequences are associated to the rule violation, not to some misguided elevation of moderators to command instant obedience, and arguing otherwise is disingenuous.
    – Ben Voigt
    May 16, 2017 at 5:57
  • 1
    @Ciro the votes actually do not support your allegation Sep 21, 2021 at 14:03
57

I say that we should do... nothing.

At its core, Stack Overflow is a website whose contents are defined by users. Now yes, we do try to keep things safe for work, and we do have a general Be Nice policy to deal with material that is offensive. But all our content comes from users.

And if you will be sanctioned for seeing certain phrases or images by the company you work for, the country you live in, or the culture you're a part of, then any website with user-defined content is not a safe place for you. Wikipedia, Reddit, and yes Stack Overflow too, you can encounter the banned material in all of these places.

It is not our responsibility to resolve this problem; that's way above our pay grade.

And yes, that means that a particular user can have a username that effectively makes it dangerous for you and those in your position to visit the site. But that's what it means to have user-defined content.

Stack Overflow cannot take responsibility to enforce the rules of your company/country/culture.

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  • 4
    Even in the case that the user exploits this very matter and explicitly states that it's intention is deliberately putting another group of users in harm's way, or damaging them ( by making site inaccessible to them ) ? May 14, 2017 at 0:14
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    @ObmerkKronen: 1) The user hasn't said that this is their intention. The user's profile makes no statement to that effect. 2) The user cannot harm other people. It's the society those people live in that is causing the harm. May 14, 2017 at 0:16
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    1) Please refer to the second link I posted . It is cited there . 2 ) An action by one side towards another can have direct consequences on a third party . It's called collateral damage. and if it is pre-calculated and deliberated - you can take off the word collateral. May 14, 2017 at 0:21
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    The citizens of the country in question should avail themselves to their government-approved QA site for programmers. (I speculate that it's approved because a little link at the bottom leads me to the page with title translated "National Public Security Organs Internet Security Service Platform", and that gov.cn platform greets me with 'Your IP is not allowed to visit this website!'. So it looks like the damage you are talking about is affecting mostly the foreigners there, but they are hardly innocent - they are in collusion with oppressive regime.
    – artem
    May 14, 2017 at 4:32
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    @artem: "they are in collusion with oppressive regime." That's more of a political position to take. This is not and should not be about whether we can punish those who "are in collusion with oppressive regime". This should be about whether users are allowed to pick the usernames they want. About whether Stack Overflow has some responsibility for following local laws about user content. About whether SO can be "safe" for every viewer around the world. May 14, 2017 at 14:30
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    @ObmerkKronen: "An action by one side towards another can have direct consequences on a third party . It's called collateral damage." Let's say I agree with that statement. That still doesn't tell us whether it is SO's responsibility to enforce the laws and customs of every country/company/culture on everyone who uses this site. If one country bans a certain word or image, is it SO's responsibility to enforce that ban upon people who don't live in that country? May 14, 2017 at 14:33
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    "live in that country" is pretty vague condition for enforcing the ban. Are the subjects of Chinese government legally allowed to access banned content while they are outside China? Let's say you agree to enforce the ban for the users according to the laws of their country, but then the country demands you to ascertain the nationality (and identity, for that matter), of any user accessing your web site - will you agree? It can get political pretty fast.
    – artem
    May 14, 2017 at 16:09
  • 2
    Ironically, Wikipedia is mostly blocked in China. As you well said, any user-defined content (this is not censored) is not a safe place for ... May 15, 2017 at 17:10
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    BTW the state of votes at meta.stackexchange.com/questions/366163/… appears to be overriding this answer Jun 5, 2021 at 20:23
30

As established in the links you've included in your first post, Stack Overflow's position until now has been that political usernames and profiles are acceptable. The question you raise - I think - is whether we should make an exception to censor political speech that some nation would retaliate against a user for even seeing, so that users in that nation don't endanger themselves by inadvertently viewing forbidden speech.

I admit that I have no idea exactly what nation or what political speech you're referring to; while restrictions on political speech are common throughout the world, I don't know of any country that punishes even the accidental viewing of forbidden political material, and since you've chosen not to tell us which country you work in, I will likely remain unenlightened about precisely what regime it is that implements such a totalitarian policy.

Regardless, I don't think Stack Overflow should modify a user's username on these grounds. Doing so would make them tools of a totalitarian state; we should not be censoring political material on behalf of governments just because they threaten to arbitrarily punish anyone within their borders who stumbles upon it if we don't. I sympathize with your circumstances, but if you wish to work in a country where accidentally stumbling across a forbidden phrase on the internet can literally put you in danger of violent retaliation from the state, then you are going to need to take precautions for your own safety anyway, no matter what Stack Overflow does. Those precautions should probably include not doing any browsing over an unencrypted connection and not visiting sites with user-generated content while you are in the room with anyone you don't trust. Even if we censored whatever particular username prompted you to ask this question, we can't prevent you from stumbling across something similar on Google.

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    @JoshCaswell as noted in the comments on the question, I don't think that China will imprison people for reading about the Tianenman Square massacre (or any of the other things it bans discussion of), let alone for stumbling across such material online by accident. Unless I'm missing something (and nobody has told me so yet), punishment for banned political speech in China is always applied to the speaker, not the listener. So while it seems that this is what the OP is talking about, I don't think it's true that she is "endangered".
    – Mark Amery
    May 13, 2017 at 22:51
  • @JoshCaswell at the time that I answered, I hadn't yet realised what user was being referred to, and had assumed that the country in question couldn't possibly be China; I am at least vaguely aware of China's censorship regime, as most people are. Thank you for the link anyway, though - I learned some more from it.
    – Mark Amery
    May 13, 2017 at 23:00
  • The links I provided , dealt with avatars and profiles. I might be wrong - but - and correct me if I am wrong - I do not recall seeing a specific resolution about user display name ( which appears in more cases than the rest ) . In regards to the links I provided , an accepted answer cited "explicit attacks on a particular group of people" and "each case would need to be examined on its own merits" . I think that your own statement of not knowing the territory or the username might be of influence in your answer. May 13, 2017 at 23:32
  • Unfortunately - There is no_ "accidentally stumbling across a forbidden phrase"_ . and google does not work in that territory. Another issue that I feel I need to stress again - I am not asking community to "censor political speech that some nation would retaliate against a user for even seeing," . my point is the community allowing one user to exploit that known consequence in order to deliberately ( by its own statement ) harm other users . In that context . the whole political discussion is mute . May 13, 2017 at 23:51
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    that political usernames and profiles are acceptable. Nope. My display name at some point used to be "Visa is Racism", because I think asking citizens of a whole country for visa is a kind of racism. I was contacted by SO and asked to change the name.
    – Shahbaz
    May 14, 2017 at 1:23
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    @Shahbaz - exactly . because choosing when the "apolitical" becomes irrelevant is in direct relation where the community influence lives and what the accepted culture is there . ( I assume the visa issue was US related - and I do not express any support for that or to any political issue on a software Q&A site ) . May 14, 2017 at 1:27
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    @ObmerkKronen The uncomfortable truth is SO gets political when it is closer to the home country of SO as a company.
    – Suraj Rao
    May 14, 2017 at 4:18
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    @Shahbaz I'm sorry to hear that; such an act by the mods contradicts the policy established at meta.stackexchange.com/a/231362/200582 and serves no purpose that I can see. I'd encourage you to post on Meta about your own case (including disclosing the content of whatever communication you had with the mods) and to restore your username to what it was. We're not supposed to be in the business of suppressing political speech that other users don't like.
    – Mark Amery
    May 14, 2017 at 8:50
  • 2
    @Shahbaz they asked you to remove such a tame username? Interesting! Was there a meta thread I can look into? May 14, 2017 at 9:47
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    @Shahbaz - To clarify, you were contacted by a moderator acting on their own, not an SE employee. That moderator changed your name based on their personal judgment. What is and is not acceptable in a username has been the subject of a lot of debate among moderators, and we don't all agree. We've been given guidance in the past that if a username is becoming a distraction, it should be changed, so how we handle this does vary from moderator to moderator.
    – Brad Larson Mod
    May 14, 2017 at 14:02
  • 5
    @ObmerkKronen All speech is potentially political. The choice to allow or prohibit any individual statement, on any topic, is political. This is because "politicalness" is not a property of the speech, it is a property of politics, and there is nothing to prevent unaccountable governments from unilaterally declaring certain speech forbidden. Stack Overflow cannot both permit open public discussion and ban all content that repressive governments prohibit. The solution I would recommend is for you to IP and DNS block Stack Overflow yourself, preventing accidental direct access. May 14, 2017 at 19:00
  • 1
    @CiroSantilli709大抓捕六四事件法轮功 That was quite a few years ago, I don't believe I can dig up any info on that.
    – Shahbaz
    May 14, 2017 at 20:50
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    @ClementCherlin Stack Overflow does not permit open public discussion. It permits open public discussion on programming topics.
    – user663031
    May 15, 2017 at 2:20
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    @torazaburo I believe you have misunderstood. I never said, nor do I believe, that Stack Overflow permits open public discussion of all topics. I said it permits open public discussion, which it does. Stack Overflow cannot permit open public discussion of programming, while banning all content that repressive governments prohibit. For example, consider the topic of how to best write a VPN to bypass a particular repressive government's firewall. That's on-topic for SO, politically charged, and very likely illegal in that government's jurisdiction. Jun 20, 2017 at 20:40
  • @ClementCherlin While I agree with you that the particular content discussed in this question shouldn't be censored, and also agree with you that Stack Overflow shouldn't censor all content that is banned by any government anywhere (which is in itself a strawman that nobody here has proposed), I still feel inclined to point out that Stack Overflow doesn't permit "open public discussion of programming" as you and torazaburo suggest, and never has. We have a pretty ruthless system of censorship of content that doesn't meet our standards, through the closure and deletion systems.
    – Mark Amery
    Jun 20, 2017 at 21:24
17

If you are asking "what can I and other users do to protect ourselves against this username?", perhaps a Greasemonkey script or the equivalent can filter it out for you. Or, perhaps develop a dedicated browser plugin to filter it out.

If you are asking "what I can and other users to with regards to Stack sites overall?", I recommend supplying the following to The Powers That Be:

  • Details of the username
  • Reasons why the username causes risks to site users (e.g., against the law, prone to vigilante reprisals)
  • Evidence of the nature of the specific harm that comes to people viewing the proscribed username (e.g., death, injury, imprisonment, deportation)
  • Evidence of the nature of the specific harm that comes to sites that publish proscribed words (e.g., site blocks)

IOW, make your case that this username is risky for site visitors and, perhaps, to the site itself.

I'm not sure if Meta is the right place for that, or whether the contact-us link is a better option. My instinct is to use the contact-us link, as posting this material to Meta might merely exacerbate the issue.


In terms of what the response should be, IMHO, that's a decision to be made by the owners and operators of Stack Exchange, Inc. Given a specific scenario (username and evidence of potential damage stemming from that username), they need to decide whether to:

  • Replace the username

  • Leave the username in place, but flag it as risky, then implement site solutions to reduce the risk to innocent site visitors, such as:

    • Mark all risky usernames as "redacted", with a tooltip showing the real name

    • Offering a "risk aversion" setting in your profile, where for certain settings risky usernames are redacted, with either a fixed default setting or one derived based on where you are visiting from

    • Applying these sorts of technical countermeasures across the board (i.e., users never see risky usernames) or on a per-region basis (i.e., users in Region X do not see risky usernames tied to risks from Region X but would see risky usernames from other regions)

  • Leave the username in place with no countermeasures, as they do not believe that the harm that it may cause is worth the cost to the freedom of expression

  • Some other possibility that I am not thinking of


Whether any given specific scenario rises to the level warranting action would depend on the details. It appears that many people do not feel that this specific situation warrants action. IMHO, there is nothing intrinsically wrong with that position. However, there is a distinct difference between "this scenario does not warrant action" and "there is never a scenario that warrants action". The OP tried to draw that distinction.

So, let's examine a different scenario, one that Pekka 웃 pointed out.

Suppose the following series of events occurs:

  • Somebody creates and popularizes a Stack Overflow account whose username is considered to be defamatory to Thai royalty
  • Some Thai prosecutor decides that software developers are "undesirables", finds out about this Stack Overflow account, and files charges against a number of Thai Stack Overflow users who can be demonstrated to have engaged with the defamatory user (e.g., participated in questions/answers/comments/chats that the defamatory user also participated in)
  • Thai judges agree that participating in discussions containing a defamatory name constitutes lèse-majesté, sentencing these Stack Overflow users for 3-15 years imprisonment per count
  • Thai officials block Stack Overflow... after the prosecutions have been completed
  • This makes the news by one means or another, so that we are aware of these events

IMHO, this scenario is within the realm of possibility. Almost by definition, it would be legal within the Thai legal framework1. For that matter, it is not wrong, depending upon one's thoughts regarding the law in question.

So, in this scenario, we have otherwise-innocent Stack Overflow users being imprisoned, simply because they participated in the site in the same areas as somebody else who "picked a fight". Perhaps some people who might not want Stack Overflow to take action in the OP's scenario might be more willing for action in this case, since there is demonstrable harm coming to Stack Overflow users, rather than theoretical potential harm.


Some have said that this isn't "our" decision. If by "our" one means most of the people participating in this Meta question, I agree completely. When things rise to this level, IMHO the only parties who really get a vote are the owners and operators of Stack Exchange, Inc., working in conjunction with the people providing evidence of the problem and Stack Exchange's legal counsel.

All that I am hoping for is clarity — whether from moderators or higher authorities — as to how to report this sort of issue and what sorts of information to supply (as a replacement for my proposed list).


1 IANATLNDIPOOTVATDNCLA (I am not a Thai lawyer, nor do I play one on TV, and this does not constitute legal advice)

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  • 17
    "So, in this scenario, we have otherwise-innocent Stack Overflow users being imprisoned, simply because they participated in the site in the same areas as somebody else who "picked a fight"." But that could have happened on Wikipedia, or any other website with user-created content. If you are subject to conditions such that conviction-by-association is a thing, then you have to take upon yourself to avoid going to places online where your associations can have consequences that you don't want. You can't ask site owners to police their entire userbase just for you. May 14, 2017 at 19:54
  • 17
    It should also be noted that, in the specific case cited here, a Greasemonkey script won't resolve the issue. It still transmits the incriminating characters, even if it doesn't display them, so it can still cause problems with ISPs retaliating for downloading illegal materials. If a filtering solution is to be effective, it would have to be done at the source, server-side. May 14, 2017 at 20:01
  • 3
    @NicolBolas: "But that could have happened on Wikipedia, or any other website with user-created content" -- this is not Wikipedia. "You can't ask site owners to police their entire userbase just for you" -- it is up to the site owners to decide what to do. Unless I misunderstand your role here, you have as much ownership stake here as I do, and I have none at all. With respect to Greasemonkey, it helps insofar as it limits the number of people who see the defamatory material, but I agree it is far from a perfect solution. May 14, 2017 at 20:04
  • 1
    @NicolBolas: It stands to reason that there are websites that are safe for Thai, Chinese, and others to visit. So, in actual point of fact, you totally can ask a site owner to take steps to make their site safe. Depending on the ease of complying, they may do so quickly, with careful consideration, with a lot of careful consideration, reluctantly refuse, or laugh in your face. Conflating all sites that have UGC together is not helpful; SE in general is quite successful despite (or because) it is far more heavily-moderated than most UGC sites. So it is one of the best candidates for this. May 14, 2017 at 22:33
  • @NathanTuggy: Wikipedia is even more heavy in their moderation than SO. Do they restrict users from having usernames with such things in them? Do they enforce local laws about banned words/phrases? May 14, 2017 at 23:59
  • 7
    @NicolBolas: Now that you mention it, WP actually does have a policy that user pages can't have "material that is likely to bring the project into disrepute, or which is likely to give widespread offense (e.g. pro-pedophilia advocacy).". The extent to which that applies to cases like this one where the disrepute is somewhat localized I don't know, and it's unlikely even most active editors really know the ins and outs, but it seems plausible enough. Plus, that's for userpages, not even names. May 15, 2017 at 0:16
  • 2
    @NathanTuggy The Wikipedia title blacklist applies to usernames as well as page names. (Some of the entries, like the ones flagged as "newaccountonly", only apply to usernames.) Most of their username blocks are aimed at spammers, impersonation attempts, and persistent vandals, but there are also some blocks which specifically target offensive words or phrases.
    – user149341
    May 15, 2017 at 21:08
  • 5
    I think it's important to note that your "suggested responses" that you believe would actually "fix" the situation are not available. StackOverflow displays its content under a CC BY-SA license granted by the content authors. That license requires attribution. StackOverflow cannot alter or remove the attribution unless an anonymization request is made by the author. It would be possible to stop displaying any content from the affected users altogether, or to visitors from certain areas. When the trolling was done using brand new accounts, there's no problem. Here, it's not so easy.
    – Ben Voigt
    May 16, 2017 at 5:09
  • @BenVoigt: good point about attribution. Would displaying a username as user12345 that still links to their profile be sufficient attribution, as a way for SO to do server-side munging? (Possibly configurable so certain users could get SO to not use some display-names. Or possibly just system-wide by squashing and locking out that user's display name, leaving only the underlying number. They could still say whatever they want in their profile page, but users in censored countries should probably only check profile pages via VPN.) IDK if this is a good idea, but maybe legal and technically Mar 13, 2021 at 14:51
13

I think Stack Overflow has an obligation to protect its users, also from their governments. That doesn't necessarily mean protesting on their behalf.

I'll try reframe the issue: the user exploits the popularity of Stack Overflow to protest and promote a cause. This makes Stack Overflow a tool in a cat-and-mouse game with the Chinese censorship.

The problem, as the OP called it, is collateral damage. It is very easy (for most of us) to say "freedom of speech is the cornerstone of human rights, let him do as he pleases" - but it's important to remember none of us is paying the price. Not everyone is so privileged. There is collateral damage. By allowing this username we are creating friction, and we are placing Chinese citizens, residents, students, and even tourists at the front-line of this protest.
Having even minor contact with this user - which anyone can do, not knowingly - can have severe consequences: You could be denied entry to China, your visa could be revoked and you could be deported, you could be arrested, or just investigated.
This can ruin lives.
It is not limited to China, of course. People could be denied access to the US after a phone search. Contact with a user with a provocative name is a good-enough excuse.

In my opinion, such user names are inappropriate. Stack Overflow is not a place for demonstrations. Similar messages would have been removed in minutes as off-topic if posted in answers or comments. The idea that just the username textbox is entitled to free speech is a little silly, to be honest.

In general, the level of leeway each field in the profile gets should be inversely proportional to its exposure. A user name is very exposed, and it makes sense it would have stricter limitations.

So where is the line? Like they say, I'll know it when I see it. In this case it looks more like an exploit of the username field.


Disclaimer - Free speech is awesome and every single person on earth should enjoy it.

4
  • 2
    Please note: I'm don't agree with my answer 100%.
    – Kobi
    May 16, 2017 at 4:54
  • Also, if that is relevant, I live in Israel. My icon currently has the flag on India because of reasons.
    – Kobi
    May 16, 2017 at 4:55
  • I didn't go into other exploits of the username field. Imagine a user called "Alex php java javascript python mysql c# android ios".
    – Kobi
    May 16, 2017 at 5:04
  • 7
    This. People are actively endangered. If I could bounty MSO answers, I would bounty this, just to draw more attention to the fact that there is a very real danger to some of our users. May 16, 2017 at 10:12
11

Firstly, I am sympathetic towards how this has/could/will affect yourself and others who live/work with the "regime" in question (to the curious, it is China, but as the OP requested, I intend to answer in a generic way)

But, I also believe that censoring this username is the same as making concessions to the regime in question, which, in my mind, is the same as supporting it, whereas doing nothing is neutral (which, even though this isn't a "political" site, is a questionable stance anyway, in my opinion).

Censoring this username in particular will solve one small problem in a sea of problems around freedom of information and opinion for the affected people, while essentially giving that government "control" over the moderation of stack overflow, not just for it's own citizens, but for those of the entire world. I think this is unacceptable, and this is more of a political message than just ignoring the username.

I think the intentions of the user are irrelevant, honestly. What if the user had a "banned" phrase in their username for some other purpose? Would it still be okay to change that username? What if tomorrow 20 other governments enacted similar policies for 100 other "banned" phrases? Would it still be okay then?

I understand this is a problem for you, and many others. But the one who has created the problem is the government banning the phrase, even if the user is purposefully goading them. You are only suggesting action be taken upon the user because it is much easier and more convenient than getting the government to change.

I don't agree that the username should be altered in any way, but to maybe help with solving the actual problems:

I think you and anyone else in this situation has to come to terms with the reality of dealing with the kind of government that would make this a problem in the first place. You can choose not to do business with them, or live there (obviously that's a huge effect on your life), or you can take whatever precautions you can, just like you would have to for a million other websites when you are in that country.

Proxies/VPNs as you mentioned can help you. For cases where clients are snooping over your shoulder, perhaps some custom adblock rules can help you (you can block with css rules).

6
  • 1
    The bigger question is weather a software related Q&A site should even have these occurrences to begin with , and should they be allowed . the scope of this site is totally unrelated to politics. so why involve personal or political crusades in it ? doing that will only leave space to other eventual debates which result in comments and answers based on political and / or cultural views . ( see other comment ) May 14, 2017 at 0:55
  • 7
    @ObmerkKronen one rationale is that such profiles punishing oppressive regimes with worse IT, thus encouraging them to become more open. The counter argument is that maybe oppression will only end when certain IT level is reached. May 14, 2017 at 9:53
  • 3
    in other words.. punish people who have nothing to do with the problem other than where they are living/were born.
    – Kevin B
    May 15, 2017 at 18:33
  • 6
    @KevinB The government of China is punishing people living in China. Stack Overflow is not responsible for the rules that the oppressive, unaccountable government of China puts in place for its citizens, nor is Stack Overflow punishing those citizens. Let's not reverse causality here. The Chinese government bans its citizens from visiting any site that contains any text that is in any way critical of the Chinese government. Stack Overflow can endorse this censorship by becoming a Chinese government censor-by-proxy, or say "those laws suck and we're not going to enforce them ourselves." Jul 9, 2017 at 20:39
  • 1
    @ClementCherlin Well, no, i'm not saying SO is punishing these users, the user using said names that are known to cause this problem are purposefully, knowingly, forcing users who may or may not have any interest in protesting said censorship into protesting it or giving up SO use. That's what i see as wrong. If you want to protest, protest. but don't infringe on the innocent.
    – Kevin B
    Jul 10, 2017 at 4:12
  • BTW the state of votes at meta.stackexchange.com/questions/366163/… might contradict this answer Jun 5, 2021 at 20:25
9

I assume this is about a certain user who has certain phrases in his username to "offend" the government of the People's Republic of China and bait them in to blocking Stack Overflow through The Great Firewall.

This is not the first question asked about this person's choice of username. In your question you link to some other meta-posts asked about this, and in the past the responses have more or less boiled down to a shrug. I've always felt this was a mistake.

We can't and shouldn't remove every little thing that someone might find offensive, but if it's effectively "Not Safe For Work" for 1.3 billion people – no matter how silly and oppressive the reasons – then we may want to consider taking action. Especially if this action is quick, painless, and has no consequence to the normal functioning of the site. We're here to provide quality Q&A, not to make political statements about various governments.

Stack Overflow is a Q&A site designed to be as free from useless distractions as reasonably possible, and it succeeds remarkably well at ths.
Users get a fair amount of leeway with their profiles - it is their "personal space" - but this should end when it starts to interfere with the Q&A part of the site, which is exactly what this person's username is doing by disrupting access to 1.3 billion people.
We can have long and probably interesting discussions about whether this is moral or correct or ethical, but Stack Overflow is not the place for those sort of discussions.

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    I find the "Not Safe For Work" analogy to be interesting. Obviously, different cultures have different ideas of what is "Safe for work", so taking a lowest-common-denominator approach is not unreasonable. We consider NSFW to be sex, violence, or needless profanity. At the same time, I have a problem with extending the NSFW policy to more arbitrary things. Particularly when it means that we are enforcing the rules of governmental censorship. Perhaps the more general question is whether usernames should be allowed to have political speech at all. May 14, 2017 at 0:31
  • 2
    @NicolBolas - I think you hit the precise point in this comment. Is being "apolitical" means to "allow all" , or "forbid all" ? . Another issue is that i understand that "enforcing the rules of governmental censorship" sound bad to all , but in that context, does "helping another X political cause which one think is right" any different ? apolitical is a two-way ( dark and confusing ) street ... May 14, 2017 at 0:39
  • "We're here to provide quality Q&A, not to make political statements about various governments" . can not summarize my feelings better. May 14, 2017 at 2:08
  • 3
    A profile page is just that and doesn't have anything to do with discussions nor technicalities. I find hard to believe a "Great Firewall" is incapable of blocking a single URL (or a handful of them). Now, the username will leak for pages upon pages on the site, that's another issue.
    – brasofilo
    May 14, 2017 at 3:00
  • @brasofilo with HTTPS, the firewall can't see which page is transmitted. See Are URLs viewed during HTTPS transactions to one or more websites from a single IP distinguishable? (I don't know whether the Chinese firewall is playing MiTM with fake certificates, that might help.) May 15, 2017 at 17:01
  • For someone claiming "Stack Overflow is not the place for those sort of discussions", you take a rather strong pro-censorship stance: "no matter how [...] oppressive the reasons – then we may want to consider taking action". You also seem to equate "NSFW" with "not accepted by XX regime", and, lastly, you imply that saying certain things equates to "disrupting access to 1.3 billion people". Please note that no one here is disrupting access to anyone.
    – Domi
    Jun 6, 2021 at 8:25
9

I think we're ignoring the elephant in the room here.

The profile of the user in question explains, in extensive detail, that the purpose of some of the content in their username is explicitly to make it difficult for Chinese users to view the site. There are political aspects to it, of course -- but the phrases they've included in their username are chosen specifically because they are likely to trigger blocks by the Chinese GFW.

Unfortunately, based on the OP's narrative, it appears that this disruption may have been successful.

The solution is simple -- forcibly remove that content from their username. Their username already contains a perfectly reasonable given name, which is clearly how they expect themselves to be addressed. Names should identify users, not be a platform for advertisement or disruption.

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    So you propose to outlaw terms on SO based on the GFW filter? The solution here is for OP to apply for government approved VPN access without any filters.
    – le_m
    May 15, 2017 at 23:44
  • 7
    @le_m No, I'm proposing an action specific to this user. No reason to make this any broader than necessary.
    – user149341
    May 15, 2017 at 23:49
  • 4
    @le_m - I agree that censorship is an issue that should be treated with care - but I don't see any value in encouraging behaviour that segregates entire countries. Allowing the user to keep this username adds no value to the site, and such I don't see why anyone here should feel strongly about allowing it...
    – Shadow
    May 16, 2017 at 1:41
  • 2
    @shadow Taking action against a single user that is not backed by a general policy that applies to everyone equally seems not right to me. However, we can't and don't want to make it a general policy that GFW terms are forbidden. That's why I am not yet convinced by duskwuff's answer.
    – le_m
    May 16, 2017 at 1:49
  • 2
    @le_m: I think the point duskwuff is making is that the user in question has declared an intent to attack, effectively weaponizing Stack Overflow towards a political end. There's a case to be made that this constitutes a distinct scenario from someone who just so happens to use those characters in their name. May 16, 2017 at 1:56
  • 1
    I would heartily agree if this was in his about me section - but this is his username. If he was openly insulting chinese (or american, german, whatever) culture in said username, people would find it offensive and report it. I don't see why targeting innocent chinese users is any different to that. As @NicolBolas said - why are we allowing the weaponisation of stack overflow? As a side - it's quite likely that this user can't report the user because the GFW probably doesn't allow him to :P
    – Shadow
    May 16, 2017 at 1:57
  • 6
    @NicolBolas Precisely. The user's intent to disrupt the site is what's important here. It shouldn't take a specific rule to recognize an attempt to disrupt the site as being undesirable, and to take action against it.
    – user149341
    May 16, 2017 at 2:07
  • 1
    Good point. But to OP it doesn't make any difference whether there is intent behind a username or not - the consequences for OP are the same. OP would have posted the same question here if the user in question would not act intentionally. If that were the case, you would accept it then? I think we should find a general guideline on how to deal with such cases.
    – le_m
    May 16, 2017 at 3:08
  • @Shadow: One can link to a user profile without citing the callsign.
    – Ben Voigt
    May 16, 2017 at 6:00
  • @le_m - If someone wrote a script that was DOSing stack overflow (somehow successfully), would we ignore it because they "weren't doing it intentionally"? A person's username name is of no consequence to the usefulness of this site, nor the information it holds. That's why I think that people who are saying to just leave it are overreacting (underreacting?). I feel like they are just shouting 'freedom' for the sake of it.
    – Shadow
    May 16, 2017 at 6:04
  • 4
    @le_m "I think we should find a general guideline…" I disagree. No need to generalize from a one-off issue.
    – user149341
    May 16, 2017 at 6:25
8

I was once a programmer for a site for knitting hobbyists. Actually the site was just a bunch of forums about knitting techniques, patterns, machines etc. It was very popular, with a friendly, constantly growing community. All this till one user posted a very political comment on one of the forums. The owner asked me what to do. Being a very tolerant person myself I told him to do nothing, arguing that our audience is not so interested in politics, as in knitting, and the issue will die by itself.

God, how I was wrong. In a very short time all forums were discussing politics, no hint of former friendliness remained, very active and contributing users started to leave, and despite my efforts to set filters, despite owners' efforts to moderate content, the site was ruined and it took about one full year to bring the order back. The site was never so popular afterward and died two years later.

I know SO is much bigger, much more mature, much more stable, still, I am worried.

5
  • 1
    As the links in the question show, it's been several years already. You may also be interested in If you're gonna talk politics, you must respect those who disagree
    – jscs
    May 14, 2017 at 14:21
  • 14
    This is a far reach example from the situation we have here. We don't allow active political discussion in questions, answers, or comments on our site and those types of discussions are quickly deleted because they have no place in active content. We're talking about something that is limited to display names and profiles (and dare I say chat, because I don't follow chat that much). Yours is a situation where they effectively didn't bother to moderate any part of the site and let political discussion take over. That's not going to happen here.
    – animuson StaffMod
    May 14, 2017 at 17:35
  • 10
    @animuson Hypocrisy, much? meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/342440/time-to-take-a-stand
    – Lundin
    May 15, 2017 at 6:51
  • 20
    @Flot2011 The CEO of SO gave the whole site the finger earlier this year when he decided to suddenly start talking politics on meta, ignoring all the site rules. Despite his attempts to ruin the site, SO is still active. All that was achieved with the post was a massive loss of trust in the SO management and SO employees.
    – Lundin
    May 15, 2017 at 6:53
  • 4
    So even tight-knit communities fall apart...
    – imrek
    May 18, 2017 at 9:33
3

Quite simply, SO is not a forum for political speech.

If a portion of a post were political speech, if would be edited out. If an entire post were political speech, it would be deleted, if not by members, then by a moderator when flagged. Political speech remains political speech when part of a handle. Members are forced to read that political speech every time they view a post, or even on the main page if a post from that person happens to make it there.

Permitting political speech as part of handles thus interferes with my ability and that of all members to use the site as it was intended.

It is at this point that meta readers typically trot out the logical fallacy that we cannot possibly "censor" political speech in handles because it involves human judgment. However, many aspects of SO, including moderator decisions, involve human judgment. If people disagree with the human judgments, there are ways to appeal such judgments. In this case, the judgment could be reserved for SE personnel, if we do not think moderators can handle the job.

Therefore, members who choose to engage in political speech in their handles should be requested to change them. If they refuse to do so, just as in the case of any member who refuses to heed any moderator suggestions, they would be banned or their account deleted.

The simple fact that political speech is off-topic at SO, wherever it occurs, is perfectly adequate as a reason for taking such steps. It is not "censorship"; no-one is being denied their right to "free speech", as if that misunderstood notion applied to SO in the first place. It is merely upholding the standards and guidelines of the site.

However, it is certainly worth also taking into the account the points made by the OP, that such political speech in handles not only violates site guidelines, but also can actively cause harm to other members and/or their companies, and eventually cause harm to SO as a whole if it results in the entire site being banned in some region, depriving all the budding programmers there of its benefit, not to mention depriving SO of the revenue deriving from their eyeballs.

Not allowing political speech in handles does not require entangling ourselves in issues over whether such speech is or is not offensive to or banned by any particular government, and whether we like that government or its policies, or whether SO should or should not be engaged in bending down to such policies. It merely requires recognizing that political speech is off-topic at SO.

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  • 7
    Except when the entire post is political speech, the members do delete it, and then the moderators undelete it. Repeatedly.
    – Ben Voigt
    May 15, 2017 at 2:54
  • 2
    The simple fact that political speech is off-topic at SO, wherever it occurs - is there a source confirming that this rule applies to usernames? Also, it is not about political speach but about any speach deemed harmful by he CCP including historical facts, religious beliefs etc etc. Where to draw the line?
    – le_m
    May 15, 2017 at 3:11
  • 4
    Apparently, SO is a forum for political speech. (Still agree with this answer, though)
    – Cerbrus
    May 15, 2017 at 8:13
  • 3
    @Cerbrus this seems to hold only for those who are "more equal than others"
    – gnat
    May 15, 2017 at 9:10
  • 2
    @Cerbrus to be pedantic, it has finally been admitted by an employee that that post is "not considered a good, on-topic question for this site". It exists solely because the rules don't apply to... that person.
    – user4639281
    May 15, 2017 at 15:39
  • Here's a question: who decides that certain speech is "political"? It's easy to deal with it in obvious cases, but if you translate the phrases in the person's username, they are not a priori political statements. They only become political because of the actions of a particular government. Which means it now becomes possible to have a username that is otherwise valid, but becomes political because of someone else. Imagine a user who named himself MAGA, in 2012. That was perfectly a-political back then, but now it means something different. What should be done about that? May 15, 2017 at 18:23
  • Nothing, until it is reported by a user and proven to cause problems. such as with this case.
    – Kevin B
    May 15, 2017 at 18:27
  • I have a friend who works at ISIS @NicolBolas: "Innovative Solutions In Space" (obviously this company and its name predate the Islamic State ISIS). While there may certainly be cases like this, I don't really see how that really applies to this user or his username. Just because in some other cases it might be difficult to say what is or isn't political doesn't really say a whole lot about this case. May 15, 2017 at 21:00
  • @BenVoigt I'd be interested in an example of moderators undeleting posts considered to be political speech.
    – user663031
    May 16, 2017 at 4:34
  • 1
    @torazaburo: Ok, they reopened it before the community had a chance to finish the deletion process. But here a prime example: meta.stackoverflow.com/posts/269992/revisions And another, also repeated shutdown by the community, forced open by moderators: meta.stackoverflow.com/posts/297859/revisions And another: meta.stackoverflow.com/posts/342440/revisions
    – Ben Voigt
    May 16, 2017 at 4:41
  • they would be banned or their account deleted. - no need for that, unless they keep posting politics in their posts. Just squash their display name so it displays as user12345. Mar 13, 2021 at 14:29
1

Note: The text below originated in an edit the OP made to their post. As the edit's content seemed more appropriate as an answer than as part of the question, the text has been moved to this answer and marked as a community wiki.


I want to share a mail that I just got, related to this question. It is , IMHO , a little extreme and radical - even belligerent - but I think it has an important point of view.

[...] THIS IS NOT MY VIEW NOR DESIRE.

Hi.

I just saw your question [link] on SE , and got your mail from [ Link to local-language Forum ] where you had a profile.

I do not want to intervene or post a radical answer ( read below ) simply because I am a very passive user of SE, and do not really contribute to the site due to the amateur nature of my programming skills. I mostly read .

I do however in a similar situation like yourself, being a foreigner in [ Territory ] for over 15 years. - and I have , like you, saw the username in question, and aslo had outages, but was always passive also in that regards .

But - I must say , you are approaching it all wrong .

When I arrived to [ Territory ] from my own western developed country, my views and positions were exactly like all the other answers . [ Territory ] is oppressive regime - fight for the people's power etc . But after living here for 15 years - I know better. what I try to say is that you are wasting your energy trying to get US / EU dwelling citizens see your point from the comfort of their securities . A feasted person would never understand the hungry .

On the same time, I am quite sure that if someone would change their user name to a direct insult on a very known and controversial monotheist god ( that already provoked some scandals ) - the community will kick in and could not retain it's integrity . Especially if it > would be in some middle-eastern character set.

What I propose is a whole different approach. Don't fight it - embrace it .

Let us call all of the users we know inside [ Territory ], Foreigners and [ Natives ] alike to change our usernames to the exact one of that original user . I am sure that we could easily get a few thousands in a less than a week. I will even provide my own proxy infrastructure to do so . In a matter of days the [ NAME OF FIREWALL SYSTEM ] will kick into action and SE will be probably banned and loose all their traffic and millions of hits from [ Territory ]

Sometimes you have to deflect the damage away from you , and towards the other part , in order to resolve a matter .

The other option is to make a direct complaint in [ Territory ] to the competent authorities, with the predictable result of banning the whole SE network . Probably also the the banning of this one individual from [ TERRITORY ] and possibly all others with same real name . I would not go that way, but I would love to see SE fight on the same arena where mammoths like google, facebook, twitter and even the US government has already lost .

Like I said , It would be counter-productive to post this on SE as an answer . Will only drag spiralling arguments , downvotes avalanche and more irrelevant debate about freedom and rights .

If you want help in this matter ,please [ Censured :-) ]

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    Do you have permission to reproduce this email? May 15, 2017 at 17:35
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    It would be counter-productive to post this on SE as an answer - I agree. It promotes a concerted effort to get SO banned in China with the implied goal to pressure Stack Exchange Inc. into applying CCP censorship rules here - or face economic losses. Let's honor the author's wish and not put this up as an answer here.
    – le_m
    May 15, 2017 at 17:42
  • @BoundaryImposition Is that question addressed to me, or to the OP? As the answer states, all I did was move some text from the OP's question into a community wiki answer, giving appropriate credit, which is permitted by SO's content license. Whether or not the OP had permission to post this in the first place is their concern. Either the OP or the person who originally sent the email is certainly free to request that this answer be removed if they so desire. (And of course, the SO community is free to upvote, downvote, or delete this answer, as per usual.)
    – Ajedi32
    May 15, 2017 at 17:45
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    @Ajedi32: To whoever. Actually, since you republished it, it became your concern :) You can't alleviate your responsibility just because somebody else had already published it elsewhere first. "Either the OP or the person who originally sent the email is certainly free to request that this answer be removed if they so desire." That is not how it works. You get permission first, and don't put it up if you don't have permission. May 15, 2017 at 18:00
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    @BoundaryImposition Says who? As I noted, content on SO is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike license, which permits me to copy content from it freely without asking the original author. If the OP or sender of the original email want to claim otherwise, they're welcome to sue me. (Or, you know, just ask politely and I'll remove the post, as I previously stated.)
    – Ajedi32
    May 15, 2017 at 18:58
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    @Ajedi32: As the original content was actually copyright by default, the OP had no legal authority to grant the CC by SA 3.0 licence to the content, thus you are not able to avail yourself of its terms. Your argument is like, if I videotaped a movie in the cinema and put it on Stack Overflow in hex-pair form, would I be able to take that and share it still futher? No of course not :) May 15, 2017 at 19:29
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    @BoundaryImposition By posting the email here the OP has implicitly asserted that they have a legal right to do so (per SO's terms of service). I have no way of verifying one way or the other whether they're correct in that assertion (nor am I qualified to do so, as I'm not a lawyer), and frankly I don't really care either way. Again, if the copyright holder of this email wants to assert that I am infringing on their copyright by posting it here they're certainly welcome to do so (at which point I'll remove it regardless of whether I believe I'm actually infringing or not).
    – Ajedi32
    May 15, 2017 at 19:48
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    @Ajedi32: Okay, then in that case I'm asking the OP. Look I don't really care who's at fault; the point is that this appears to be a private email published on the internet without permission. May 15, 2017 at 19:49
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    @BoundaryImposition Cool. Let me know what you find out.
    – Ajedi32
    May 15, 2017 at 19:49
-4

Your question discusses the negative consequences that this person's choice of username has for you and various other people. And yet, you chose to do business in a totalitarian regime, knowing full well the potential consequences of that choice. Now you have to face up to those consequences, and you're finding them unpalatable.

Well, tough.

Stack Overflow isn't responsible for protecting its users from the results of their decisions. The problem here is the regime you've chosen to take money from for your work, not the user whose name offends said regime's political sensibilities.

EDIT for anyone who is downvoting me because they somehow think I support censorship: whether I do or do not isn't relevant to the question asked. The issue is between the asker and the government of the country in question; it isn't Stack Overflow's problem or responsibility in any way, shape or form.

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    The OP's situation, and what we think of their business choices, doesn't really matter in this discussion though - the same thing could happen to any of the 1.38 billion people who had no choice when becoming subject to that totalitarian regime (with possibly much more severe consequences than a cancelled contract). Not saying that means we should self-censor everything that could offend said regime, or any other regime... but the "well, tough" argument doesn't seem pertinent to this discussion
    – Pekka
    May 15, 2017 at 18:13
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    You chose to do business in a totalitarian regime... Wow. Isn't it incredible how people can just completely disregard entire countries so flippantly... or are you seriously implying that people who happen to reside in such a country deserve to be banned from whole sites just because a specific user on that site think they're funny?
    – Shadow
    May 16, 2017 at 1:35
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    Wow. You think that the people residing in that country should have access to the resources provided by this site, while the government of that country blatantly disregards basic principles of the culture that built the internet, including this site. Web exists only because people have the ability to freely express themselves without asking for permission, and without fearing retribution for being non-conforming.
    – artem
    May 16, 2017 at 4:35
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    @shadow I think what he's saying is that these users should be complaining to the government when they do get banned. It makes sense, SE has no obligation to respect the laws of totalitarian governments.
    – Magisch
    May 16, 2017 at 7:21
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    @shadow Please provide evidence that the user in question thinks they're "funny". From what I can see from their profile, they are completely serious about the issue of censorship. The method they've taken to confront it is a novel and problematic one, but it is obviously having results (hence this question), which means it's achieved more than most of us have in that regard.
    – Ian Kemp
    May 16, 2017 at 10:20
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    @artem I have no idea where you got that from; my answer neither condemns nor condones the behaviour of that country, for the reason that my opinions of said behaviour aren't relevant to the issue at hand.
    – Ian Kemp
    May 16, 2017 at 10:22
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    do I understand correctly that one would also better abstain of buying and using stuff made in that country? Because money paid for it would support the regime over there and those who decided to do business with it, wouldn't it
    – gnat
    May 16, 2017 at 12:19
-7

I feel that I can't take a stand on either side of this issue. A user should be allowed to express themselves but one should also not be excommunicated because of the actions of another user. I think the best case scenario would be a server side script allowing users to block users that they find offensive or similar. The downside would be losing valuable information that user has to contribute but in a situation such as this both parties could use SO without feeling oppressed.

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    In what sense does asking someone to remove/change a username which is blatantly offensive to some people, and which is harming other people, constitute "excommunication"?
    – user663031
    May 14, 2017 at 12:51
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    Is "I'm the next Hitler" as username covered in freedom of expression? Or is that just trolling? (Disclaimer: that's an example. I am in no way the next... ugh, no.)
    – Cerbrus
    May 15, 2017 at 9:13
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    @Cerbrus I KNEW IT!!!!!!
    – user4639281
    May 15, 2017 at 15:43
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    Instead of blocking the user, have their name display as user12345 for you (i.e. ignore their display name, treat it as if they never set one). It might even let you reply to their comments with the right user-number, although it would look confusing to them and everyone else. Mar 13, 2021 at 14:17

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