tl:dr;
In short, I'm suggesting users of "sufficient" reputation should be able to access the unmoderated version of comments, at the press of a button/link.
original
I'm writing this because I believe moderating comments without any sort of transparency is inherently wrong and I haven't found an open discussion about it.
I understand that one of the purposes of censoring comments is removing the parts which might be deemed offensive by others but that is, in my opinion, too broad and therefore a flawed approach, for at least the following reasons:
- No matter how skilled moderators are, they have no technical means of knowing what other people might find offensive (it depends on education, culture and context, and differs from person to person). It's not a matter of if they get it wrong. It's a matter of how much they get it wrong, on average.
- It violates the right to freely express convictions and opinions
- At times it impedes truthful and forthright communication, which is a very useful tool for solving problems, especially the ones of a technical nature
- In order to be able to think, one has to risk being offensive. thinking runs the risk of offending anyone who thinks differently, but it's the main engine of our evolution, both as individuals and as species
- We don't come here to be treated as helpless, defenseless and incompetent children; we come here because we want to become the exact opposite of that. Asking a question here is the equivalent of stating:
"Here's a problem which makes me feel stupid and incompetent. I'd like to learn how to solve it so that tomorrow I'll be less stupid and more competent."
In the case of questions and answers, a user (with a fairly low amount of reputation) has access to the original text but, in the case of comments, non-moderators have no access to the original source.
Maybe we could have some more transparency on the censorship process, maybe we should differentiate between types of offensiveness and maybe we could give users the ability to opt into seeing the uncensored version of the content, at the risk of being offended, in the off-chance they might be more mature than moderators might consider them to be.
Maybe we could stop treating users as helpless, immature and defenseless. Maybe we could invest some trust in their ability to act responsibly and give them the opportunity to exercise this ability.