The Manila Times

Who does #NoPlaceFor­Hate displace?

- KATRINA STUART SANTIAGO

BLOGGING since 2008, along with a mother who’s been doing it since 2007, our policy for the comments section has always been clear: no murahan, no takutan. As owner of the blog, you decide where that line is drawn, and you’d be surprised that in fact that line is very clear.

And no, it isn’t as simple as disapprovi­ng comments that use cuss words – sometimes the mura is not directed at anyone, as it is about frustratio­n and anger. And sometimes the comments that have no cuss words, no kabastusan, but in fact miss the point, are the ones you’d really rather delete; better sense of course dictates that you shouldn’t – even those with comprehens­ion problems have a right to free speech. Besides, you can always ignore those comments.

Moderation and discernmen­t

This is why it came as a surprise that Rappler.com has made a big deal about its new policy to moderate the comments sections on its website because of the amount of hate they’ve apparently been receiving. This has prompted them to create a campaign called #NoPlaceFor­Hate, which is contingent upon their announceme­nt that from here on in, they are going to start moderating their comments sections.

To which one can’t help but ask: Why are you only doing that now?

Long ago, when I was writing for GMA News Online with Howie Severino as my editor, the comments section on a piece on Piolo Pascual became site of bullying that the article itself was taking a stand against. I remember being gladly surprised that an editorial decision was made to turn off the comments section of that article altogether – it’s the kind of call that only an editor with a good sense of audience behavior would know to make, on a case to case basis.

One realizes that moderating the comments sections of opinion blogs and media websites goes without saying. Of course it requires discernmen­t, which requires an amount of time as well. There will be cases when anger might actually kick off a productive discussion about the issue at hand; there might be instances when the person expressing frustratio­n with curse words is open to a conversati­on. Of course there will be times when you realize the discussion is nothing but a dead end.

Excess and tolerance

Which brings me to a second question: Why is Rappler making a big deal out of this editorial decision to moderate its comments section – complete with a campaign to boot?

Because none of this is new. Commenters, anonymous and otherwise, have always cut across social class and language, which dictate the kind of articulati­ons one might encounter. To me at least, the current landscape of so- cial media is not unique to these times. In fact, if all these years you were able to exist on social media and the Internet without having to deal with a tang*namo here, an accusation of being bayaran there, then you’ve obviously been existing in an echo chamber, limited to the network of your social class, where there ain’t a lot of disagreeme­nt.

Which is why a full-blown campaign seems a bit too excessive an exercise for an editorial decision that should’ve been made years ago.

An August 29 article though answers this question. In “#AnimatED: War has come to our conversati­ons,” Rappler details what they are waging a war against – other than hate of course.

For one thing, it’s a war against what they paint as an anonymous mob who are on a “rampage.” They also connect the dominance of this “Malicious, hostile and offensive people” to one President Duterte, who “has not hidden his penchant for profane language and routinely dishes out kill warnings. He has

shown little tolerance for criticism and answers back with threats. In doing so, he has set the tone for our national conversati­on. Anger and violence in our discourse have edged out civility.”

Going to war

to war, not just with a mob they are but also with the President himself, who they blame for bringing the discourse to this point of no civility.

It seems important to remind us they were calling it by another – more

The idea that it is the crowd that there is “wisdom in the crowd” com sold itself as “new” and “bet

are contribute­d by the public: “I think that’s the model for the future. It’s collaborat­ive. I like this world. Because that’s always been the way I am. I never felt one person or one if you can get a mechanism that can actually harness collective wisdom, why will you not?” (Homegrown.

this collective wisdom as something mood meter, a crowd-sourcing tool the most number of votes) and the crowd-sourced mood of the day.” To her, this was important for a country like ours: “Where institutio­ns are weak and corruption is endemic, frustrated society, push action and help build institutio­ns bottom-up.”

Silencing the “crowd”

But what happens when what that mood meter measures is nothing but anger? What happens when the when the crowd-sourced mood of the day is one that is frustrated, not so much about society, but about the website that’s lived off crowd-sourcing all these years?

to differenti­ate between this “mob” that they want to silence on their site, and the crowd whose “wisdom” through emotions they’ve put on a pedestal all these years. The crowd at present believes – as all crowds do – that they hold an amount of wisdom; now they also feel empowered to articulate their anger and frustratio­n at mainstream media, speaking on their own terms.

If anything, all # NoPlace limitation­s: All this time, they only cared for their “crowd.” And now that the more dominant voice is a crowd that is not “theirs,” a crowd that is angry and frustrated and absolutely critical, instead of acknowledg­ing this toward “pushing action,” the decision is to silence this crowd altogether, with a campaign to be carried by

That’s the thing with “new” media. At some point, it just gets old.

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