#IndieWeb Raison d’etre #55: Freedom of the press trumps atrocious comment moderation

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Last week I wrote up “Some Thoughts on Academic Publishing” after reading “Who’s downloading pirated papers? Everyone” from Science | AAAS which made some heavy rounds in social media, particularly in academic spheres. Originally I began typing my thoughts/comments into the Disqus box on their website. After getting to the third graph, I began thinking, I should be writing this on my own website as a standalone comment/piece of content and just POSSE it over to their Disqus box.Despite the fact that the editors/moderators of one of the most venerable science journals of our day will allow internet trolls like CPO_C_Ryback and CPO_C_Rybacks_Mother to go thirty rounds on nearly every comment on their featured piece for the week, my slightly more tempered comment is still sitting in their moderation queue untouched. Fortunately I had the foresight to have self-published it before hand, or the not-insignificant time I spent thinking and writing about the topic at hand would have been gone the moment I pressed send. It’s one thing to get lost in the shuffle of hundreds of comments amidst trolls, it’s another thing altogether to be moderated out of existence. The IndieWeb movement has prevented me from feeling like I did two decades ago after writing a term paper for hours only to lose it after discovering that I hadn’t hit control-s to save what I’d written. The additional benefit was that I was able to post those same thoughts on multiple other networks effortlessly while still being able to own what I’d originally written.The greatest irony of the whole affair is that in conjunction with the particular article I was commenting on, Marcia McNutt, Editor-in-Chief Science Journals, published a companion piece about the high costs and attention to detail and quality that journals try to maintain in their digital presence. Apparently this massive expense and terrific effort doesn’t go as far as preventing internet trolls like those mentioned from running roughshod over their own site (which is “moderated” by the way) while keeping out commentary that may add to the discussion and community that they’re apparently not attempting to foster.#sciencecommunication #publishing #indieweb #academicsamizdat