Caring About Comments
Published on Jul 2, 2020 (updated Jul 1, 2023), filed under misc (feed). (Share this on Mastodon or Bluesky?)
Maybe youâre like me, and comments have begun to mildly scare you. Maybe youâre skeptical about popular discussion culture, too. Maybe you can relate because you, too, have found yourself write something reasonable you care about and a shitstorm broke out that, of all people, was being led by peers and acquaintances you friended online.
And yet you and I love feedback. I, to share my perspective, also really need feedback, and so I even pay for it, which includes everything from running a QA program for this site to hiring professional editors for my indie books.
Comments are feedback. However, ever since the âWeb 2.0â heyday of the Social Web, things have changed:
People leave fewer comments.
When people leave comments, the signal-to-noise ratio is increasingly bad. (You know the scavenger hunt of identifying constructive thinking in a YouTube, Facebook, or Twitter comment centithread.)
The discussion culture is increasingly marked by entitlement, intolerance, and aggression.
In many places, for there are of course exceptions, tending to comments has turned into an expensive and sometimes pointless use of time. Reading and responding to, even enabling comments makes less and less sense.
It makes so little sense by now that personally, I rarely enable comments and likewise rarely pay attention to them. As I love and need feedback, that sucks. Maybe this is similar for you.
Make Comments Great Again
What would turn this around?
As authors I think we could do two things:
Invest (even more) into the quality of our contentâafter all there are always issues in what we produce.
Become (even more) tolerant of intoleranceâbecause we can also not rule out that we may be overly sensitive, and could try to cope better with the peculiarities of the contemporary discourse.
What We Can All Do
There may also be things we could all do, however, as readers, as commenters, as people using the Webâand these things look more realistic and promising:
Question whether we need to say something. Just because we have a view doesnât mean we need to share it. (Donât ask me about all the articles and comments I have not written.) I suppose we could come up with better discussion ground rules, too, but I believe itâs fair to suggest to think first.
Put ourselves in the authorâs shoes. Empathy is not dead, it rather reflects nicely on us. Itâs easy to bow to instinct and judge the other side a monster, but, come on. Thatâs not just a brutal and violent approach to life, itâs also unfair and shortsighted. Itâs easy to misunderstand someone, itâs easy to make a mistake, itâs easy to get carried away. That goes for both sidesâif we want others to understand our fuming and flaming, we could try to understand them, too.
Show respect. (The respect we give is the respect we get.) Itâs not on us to judge others on a few minutes of their life that we donât have much knowledge and context for (see the next point). We must not immediately like what others proposeâwe may well object against itâ, but it should all start with respect.
Be humble. Weâre probably smart. That doesnât mean much, however. Here are two things I find particularly important to remember: One, to really tell what another person means, we probably need to get to know that person as well as the whole context. Two, we tend to overestimate ourselves. Thatâs an awfully bad foundation for everyone to play Holy Person, to criticize, attack, and punish other people.
Err on the kind side. One of the things Iâve liked the most when studying philosophy is the idea of âcharitable interpretationââto read an author and view mistakes and ambiguities favorably. We can do the same with other people, and be nice on them. There are literally thousands of reasons why we may get them wrong. We cannot put that all on themâincluding ourselves and our sensitivities. Letâs err on the kind side.
Of course, exceptions may âproveâ these rules.
â§ This I poured out before renaming the article; it was originally called âWhy I Stopped Caring About Commentsâ and then went far beyond. These are early, spontaneous, authentic thoughts, and Iâll leave the article open for comments until overwhelmed by spam. Machine spam, that is. Apparently I havenât stopped caring about comments after all.
(This is one of five âlostâ articles that I only published in 2021.)
About Me
Iâm Jens (long: Jens Oliver Meiert), and Iâm a web developer, manager, and author. Iâve been working as a technical lead and engineering manager for companies youâve never heard of and companies you use every day, Iâm an occasional contributor to web standards (like HTML, CSS, WCAG), and I write and review books for OâReilly and Frontend Dogma.
I love trying things, not only in web development and engineering management, but also in other areas like philosophy. Here on meiert.com I share some of my experiences and views. (I value you being critical, interpreting charitably, and giving feedback.)