One of the easiest ways to strengthen a community against attacks is to shine a spotlight on the behaviors shown by people attempting to sabotage it. This is done by labor organizers in real life to strengthen a group of workers against union busting, for instance.
The term often used for this is “inoculation”. Similar to being vaccinated once you are aware of an attacker, the effectiveness of their behavior decreases.
So Hexbear comrades, what patterns have you noticed in wreckers, trolls, and feds? Comment in the thread and I’ll update this post to include your feedback.
Terminology
Troll
:troll:
Standard internet bog person. Not particularly clever or inventive. 4chan-tier. Nothing in their brain but slurs.
Wrecker
:silver-legion:
Typically fixated on the site, repeat and/or sustained activity. (Eg Pumpkin Spice Flintstone guy). Might be a reference to an old USSR term for saboteurs in the party?
Fed
:fedposting:
Rare (?). Tries to encourage illegal behavior. Bad at it. Often doing it just to see who corrects them and in what ways.
Patterns I’ve noticed
General
:cissues:
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new account with slightly “off takes” that gradually becomes increasingly aggressive
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“just asking questions”
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“innocently” brings up incredibly specific past struggle sessions
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tries to position obvious shitposts as sincerely held opinions that somehow reflect poorly on the site (eg “everyone loves hunter biden”)
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attempts to take other user’s sentences out of context and spin it into an argument
Wrecker Types
Fresh Accounts without History (FAWH)
:amogus:
These are accounts created in the last few weeks with little to no activity FAWHs indicate ban avoidance, shell propaganda accounts, and/or a desire to hide a pointed agenda. Identify and counter this by checking post histories.
Defrosted FAWHs
:corporate-art:
These accounts behave similarly to FAWHs but show a much older registration date combined with long periods of low activity, reflecting history editing or dormancy. They will occasionally only have comments at or around the time of struggle sessions. Identify and counter this behavior by checking post histories.
Drive-by Accounts
:stupidpol:
These accounts post bigoted or inflammatory comments in active threads then delete/edit their comments a day or two after the submission dies to obscure the pattern of their activity.
This is hard to spot unless you check back in with your suspected trolls or seek them out by reviewing. If you catch them in the act it’s hugely indicative of subversive intent.
Identify and negate this by monitoring suspected trolls for post deletion and reporting before they are deleted. Also quoting especially aggressive replies so they can’t edit it away.
I’ll update this based on other’s comments. Viva la Hexbear!
:hexbear-retro:
Considering how readily the website bans people even with long histories, taking no intermediate steps between “silently removing comments hours later” and “banned”, it’s no wonder you get people with new-ish accounts and negative opinions on the assumptions people make for the sake of community discipline.
Lol what are you talking about? Just thinking of the two long time users that were banned most recently, they had a very long history (well over a year) of saying either misogynistic or overly aggressive things without being banned. That really doesn’t match up to the experiences you’re describing here. I think most people knew the most recent dude was likely to pop off if you so much as suggested he do something differently
PootrKrobuttkin is the most recent banned person I think? But what I said could be used to describe both Pootr and Z-Poster, since they were needlessly aggro all the time
For clarity, I meant Pootr and Skoubalon in my post. I don’t remember Z-Poster being misogynistic
Since I made this account to get the other post deleted, I’ll do a “fuck it, mask off” and disclose being Skoubalon.
Regarding the other two (tangential)
I took a small break from the site and missed Pootr flaming out, though I accidentally seem to have incited it on a proximate level. I don’t remember Pootr well outside of their discussions with me (where they were kind) and, looking up some relevant threads and trying to piece together what actually happened and what they actually said is confusing.
Z was never misogynistic to my knowledge, I assumed you meant them for angry one and Pootr for the misogynist since they flamed out after me and people called me a misogynist. All this to say, I basically can’t weigh in on negatives of the specific histories of people who were not me.
Anyway, the reason I ask is because you talk about me having a “long history” of such and such, and that would actually be a good reason if that was a disciplinary history, i.e. a bunch of times where the mods told me to act otherwise and I repeatedly regressed. That’s not what happened. What happened was various comments and one or two posts were deleted after the fact and I didn’t know about almost any of it until after I was banned. You can create a story for yourself about personal history proving I should be booted, but really I think it shows that I was acting in good faith rather than just some mask-wearing shit who occasionally went mask-off.
What I am contending, not to get that account back (I think I was able to delete it), but as a point of contention about how the site is moderated is that, if a user does shit that merits mod interference, you should actually let them know and maybe even discuss it with them instead of just letting it fly under the radar until you decide it’s enough to ban them over, because that’s essentially applying every infraction retroactively. Does that make sense?
It would also have the side effect of making legitimate disagreement slightly more possible.
Edit: i see the irony in my two uses of “mask-off”. To clarify, the first refers to literal identity and the second refers to ideology. I try to be transparent, or at least honest, about my ideological leanings.