Since no one else seems to have said this yet: I like getting responses, and even huge delays are not an issue! :)
I occasionally reply to year old posts, and occasionally get replies to year old comments/posts of mine. I enjoy both of these situations—the latter tends to prompt me to revisit a topic, and I’ll often have new insights or perspective since I’ve only been at this ‘rationality’ thing for a couple years.
5-day-old responses are rarely even noticed by me—I’m used to 1-2 weeks for a reply to m personal email! Not everyone checks the internet daily, and people often vanish for weekends, vacations, or just general being-busy or low-on-spoons.
Edit: I’d also suggest that a community norm of “It’s okay to reply, even 2 years later” would be cool—if the person being-replied-to doesn’t want to revisit the topic, they can just ignore the reply, after all.
I think we already have that norm on Less Wrong—I see lots of replies to old comments in the Recent Comments pane, often creating new trails of discussion months or years after the parent comment. I like it very much.
Judging by the comments on this thread, it seemed that a lot of people still felt guilt, so I assumed that “this is okay” is not a clear community norm, despite the actual behavior being quite common. I wanted to signal boost “I am okay with this, and I strongly suspect so are a lot of people” without lying and claiming I actually knew how the community-at-large felt :)
Or forums where you post something, arguing why open discussion of a certain topic should be allowed, and your comment is rendered selectively invisible a few minutes after you make it.
Or forums where you post something, arguing why open discussion of a certain topic should be allowed, and your comment is rendered selectively invisible a few minutes after you make it.
I’m told it is only worth arguing about such things at Alicorn’s Dinner Parties. Although I can’t imagine it is the optimal strategy for being invited back.
I was going to retract that comment… I have No Opinion on the advisability of current moderation policy and practice, in general. It’s just this one issue where I hope that the powers will eventually see sense; so complaining about the bare fact that they choose to exercise their authority is not the thing to do.
Edit: I’d also suggest that a community norm of “It’s okay to reply, even 2 years later” would be cool—if the person being-replied-to doesn’t want to revisit the topic, they can just ignore the reply, after all.
I’d suggest that not only would such a norm be cool, it actually is cool.
Since no one else seems to have said this yet: I like getting responses, and even huge delays are not an issue! :)
I occasionally reply to year old posts, and occasionally get replies to year old comments/posts of mine. I enjoy both of these situations—the latter tends to prompt me to revisit a topic, and I’ll often have new insights or perspective since I’ve only been at this ‘rationality’ thing for a couple years.
5-day-old responses are rarely even noticed by me—I’m used to 1-2 weeks for a reply to m personal email! Not everyone checks the internet daily, and people often vanish for weekends, vacations, or just general being-busy or low-on-spoons.
Edit: I’d also suggest that a community norm of “It’s okay to reply, even 2 years later” would be cool—if the person being-replied-to doesn’t want to revisit the topic, they can just ignore the reply, after all.
I think we already have that norm on Less Wrong—I see lots of replies to old comments in the Recent Comments pane, often creating new trails of discussion months or years after the parent comment. I like it very much.
Judging by the comments on this thread, it seemed that a lot of people still felt guilt, so I assumed that “this is okay” is not a clear community norm, despite the actual behavior being quite common. I wanted to signal boost “I am okay with this, and I strongly suspect so are a lot of people” without lying and claiming I actually knew how the community-at-large felt :)
Me too. I get frustrated by forums where old threads are routinely closed, or where participants are rebuked for bumping an old thread.
Or forums where you post something, arguing why open discussion of a certain topic should be allowed, and your comment is rendered selectively invisible a few minutes after you make it.
I’m told it is only worth arguing about such things at Alicorn’s Dinner Parties. Although I can’t imagine it is the optimal strategy for being invited back.
It’s not really that helpful to argue it at my dinner parties, either. I’m at all of them, I oppose the karma tax, it’s still here.
I was going to retract that comment… I have No Opinion on the advisability of current moderation policy and practice, in general. It’s just this one issue where I hope that the powers will eventually see sense; so complaining about the bare fact that they choose to exercise their authority is not the thing to do.
I’d suggest that not only would such a norm be cool, it actually is cool.