I can also trace a similar arc, over the past fifteen years or so:
“Um, what do you mean, ‘communities’? A community is a physical group of people out there in the real world, who share needs for physical safety, thriving, a favorable ecology, etc. Sure, many of these things are quite applicable in a real-world meeting, but an online social group is nothing like that! This ‘virtual community’ business is dangerous nonsense that’s going to promote groupthink, get in the way of actual useful work (like writing blogposts, editing wikis, creating media content and writing free/open source software!) and empower authoritarian personalities who’ll want to enforce their arbitrary rulesets and codes of petty etiquette, and/or force the social group to compromise towards their own preferred values!”
Needless to say, I haven’t changed my opinion this far. Nowadays I still think that physical meetups, “unconferences” and the like can be exceedingly useful to inspire and coordinate useful work that mostly happens online; but that attitudes and concerns associated with these, such as written “codes of conflict”—a very predictable and needed development in any physical community larger than about 150 members! - should be kept separate and not be allowed to infect the “online” side of things like some sort of parasitic “virtual community” ideology.
I can also trace a similar arc, over the past fifteen years or so:
“Um, what do you mean, ‘communities’? A community is a physical group of people out there in the real world, who share needs for physical safety, thriving, a favorable ecology, etc. Sure, many of these things are quite applicable in a real-world meeting, but an online social group is nothing like that! This ‘virtual community’ business is dangerous nonsense that’s going to promote groupthink, get in the way of actual useful work (like writing blogposts, editing wikis, creating media content and writing free/open source software!) and empower authoritarian personalities who’ll want to enforce their arbitrary rulesets and codes of petty etiquette, and/or force the social group to compromise towards their own preferred values!”
Needless to say, I haven’t changed my opinion this far. Nowadays I still think that physical meetups, “unconferences” and the like can be exceedingly useful to inspire and coordinate useful work that mostly happens online; but that attitudes and concerns associated with these, such as written “codes of conflict”—a very predictable and needed development in any physical community larger than about 150 members! - should be kept separate and not be allowed to infect the “online” side of things like some sort of parasitic “virtual community” ideology.