The latest blog post has comments disabled/closed.
Just curious as to if this is on purpose or an accident.
The latest blog post has comments disabled/closed.
Just curious as to if this is on purpose or an accident.
This was on purpose (I personally closed them).
We were already receiving abusive comments on Twitter about this post, and I didn't want to deal with that on our own platform.
This follows a familiar pattern for us: when we've written about women in tech before, however benign, we get flooded with abusive comments. Not only is that unfortunate in and of itself, it also means that otherwise constructive, thoughtful comments get lumped in and thrown out with the abuse.
I'm mostly surprised that comments were ever enabled on that post - perhaps it's not possible to disable them before publishing.
Any post about women (in tech) is going to attract trolls. Explicitly referencing things like the Google guy's internal memo and firing is going to make things worse. Having a buzzfeed-esque title (X things you can do to Y [more Z]) is going to make it worse (at least from me, since I am growing steadily more annoyed by the style.) Yes, cutting comments will stifle the non-troll opinions both for and against, but the moderates would probably be overrun anyway. Why not just be proactive and close the door before the crap flows in?
Maybe the article could change to be more moderate and considerate of different viewpoints (see point 3 of post in question), but I don't think that would help. There are just too many trolls, too much negative energy floating around from the Googler's internal memo, and too much unavoidable conflation with the current views of feminism - it's just not possible to be perceived as neutral by everybody on this topic at this time.
(I do think it was a mistake to call the Googler's internal memo a 'tirade'. The memo was controversial, certainly, but that should key you in to the fact that a lot of people agreed with it or at least didn't find it to be tirading. I suspect that most of the trolling and vitriol found on Twitter made reference to the memo.)
It is not hard to understand why the comments were closed.
The people who published that post, closed down comments, and moderate this site, believe their position to be the right and moral one, and other's positions to be the wrong, offensive ones. Namely: that equality of outcome is valuable, and that men lifting women up "empowers" them.
You might not agree, but you're not the one with the "shut it down" button.
Because StackOverflow wants to promote a one sided political agenda based on "Diversity", or as it's actually known, repressing men and white people for the sake of promoting other "genders" and darker skinned people, because, according to their own logic, they aren't capable of getting positions through hard work.
Anybody that goes against that narrative or points out the logical fallacies in the blog post, are usually demonized as some form of troll or some form of mysogynist, KKK\Nazi extremist and are either banned or publicly shamed so they can't get work. (Usually anybody that's even a little to the Right of Karl Marx gets this treatment. It's what happened to James Demore when he published the Google memo several months back.) The original writer will say they are getting "harassed" when they are just getting salty comments they can easily block on their social media page.
It's a huge problem in the Tech industry, because a lot of social justice activists fresh from college have infiltrated the industry using buzzwords and doublethink\newspeak about "Driversity" and Feminism. They're usually called Social Justice Warriors (SJW's) and are essentially the radical Leftist version of the Alt-Right. Even using the same logic like White Privilege, which is a concept that white people have power and privileges that darker skinned people don't have. White Privilege is a belief in White Supremacy, because within their mindset white people should use their privilege\supremacy to help lift up darker skinned people (or "People of Color") to positions of power. It truly is another form of bigotry, but there's incredibly low expectations about other races.
It's common for mainstream media and large websites to shutdown comments when a political agenda is being pushed.
Stack Overflow wants to encourage the narrative that the ideas of third wave feminism and radical opposition to the current USA president are generally accepted in the development community.
Allowing comments on this article and others like it may go against the narrative they are trying to cultivate with blog posts.