This is not a good idea in my opinion, because it would allow a submitter to silence any criticism of their submission, regardless of how legitimate and valid those criticisms are. It’d be easy, too, because all the submitter would have to do is claim that a commenter is “harassing” them - even if no harassment actually exists - and poof! That commenter’s ability to comment on the submission is gone.I was thinking about this the other day when Wes floated this to me one on one and thought that if the person feels they need to comment on the submission, they can set up a DM with the reviewer and staff. That way the voices can be heard and if their concerns hold water, the reviewer can require that changes be made.
Why can’t the submitter just place the harasser on ignore? Doing so would let the harasser say their piece without troubling the submitter - and if the harasser’s posts are in bad faith, the staff and/or the reviewer can deal with the harasser as need be.Otherwise, the NTSE would become a loophole for harassers to neg.
Then the person being harassed needs to talk to Wes and get the issue resolved, probably by having the harasser be banned from commenting in the thread. Censoring anyone and everyone who disagrees with the submitter - which I can practically guarantee will happen should this rule be implemented - is not the answer to a problem that in my opinion doesn’t even exist, as in my nine years here I’ve never seen anyone say they were harassed into not submitting anything to the NTSE. All of the complaints I’ve seen have instead been related to the NTSE’s bureaucratic nature and sluggishness.Remember we're dealing with problematic people in someone's online life. The harassed is more likely to never submit anything after bad experiences than be a contributing member of setting submissions.
I agree, which is why I simply can’t support this - someone who doesn’t receive constructive feedback from their peers during the submission process will in my opinion inevitably craft submissions of a lesser quality then someone who received the aforementioned feedback.We should be uplifting members and supporting them to create, not making them fear the process of such.
Wes and/or staff have always made this call with justification from the other party. I understand the concern but it shouldn't be something thrown around willy nilly, nor has it been.even if no harassment actually exists
Also a good point. The problem I see arising from this is that “harassment” is not a well defined thing. Merriam-Webster seems to cover it well and yet it is still loosely defined. One constant is that harassment annoys the person experiencing it so I’ll base my argument around that.Wes and/or staff have always made this call with justification from the other party. I understand the concern but it shouldn't be something thrown around willy nilly, nor has it been.
I appreciate having this definition to work with, though it worries me still because this could still be just anything that the other member finds frustrating or annoying. THIS is what I was going through in the past and I got no protection, so I can see you wanting that fixed. I gave this a lot of thought so if you read it all, I genuinely appreciate that. I feel like I’m kind of in the middle on this topic, but I’d rather be the one to point out the potential abuses rather than us find them in the wild.Conduct is considered unsafe when it is severe or pervasive enough that it has the effect of:
- Unreasonably interfering with another's players ability to enjoy or access Star Army
- Creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive environment on Star Army
- Makes a member concerned for their personal safety or health
Harassment is dealt with as an OOC safety issue and OOC safety issues always override concerns about the RP. That's just the way it's got to be. It is more important for a member to be safe than it is for someone to be able to comment on a setting submission.
There should be a part of the rules that encourages people to block each other if they cannot maintain civil conduct with each other over the long term.
We're not in real life where someone can just leave the room if they don't like another person. We have to share this space together and I think it's perfectly alright for the people that just don't get along to not have a thing to do with one another.
Otherwise, the NTSE would become a loophole for harassers to neg.
Why can’t the submitter just place the harasser on ignore?
Additionally, I think we should reinstate to requirement for new members to have some form of roleplay within the site before they can start developing "independent" things on the wiki (full species, factions, technologies, etc.).
I'm in favor of keeping the 3 month restriction on major setting additions from newbies.
Too many things. I generally agree, but I'll hit on a couple of highlights below.Char's massive list of things.
There shouldn't be rules for thee and not for me and should be equal across the board regardless of faction or submitter.
We should be encouraging setting-creators to create things in a faction without 10-pages of arguments derailing it and need to revise the rules to protect topics instead of them always getting locked.
We need to revise rules towards encouraging sub-factions again and if people want to make new factions have them temporarily be a sub-faction of an existing faction.
If a player puts their PC in a situation where violence is obviously an inevitability or has a jousting of words with a dangerous PC that turns violent they should not be able to just leave!
1. Clear guidelines for child, childlike or characters appearing to be childlike. This includes behavior, physical appearance, mannerisms, and who's allowed or should be allowed to play them in this adult setting. 2. Guidelines for discord on childish behavior, such as actions indicative or appearing to be indicative of someone potentially underage.
Guidelines on when role-playing in a non roleplay area should be permissible, IE: the Discord server. Ideally it shouldn't be utilized unless a roleplay channel is created. If enough people do wish to partake in or view this type of activity I would suggest the addition of an in character/roleplay section of the discord.
...or make a unique "Random Alien" character from an unspecified and unnamed alien species. Introducing a new species is done only through the Setting Submissions process.
I was thinking about this the other day when Wes floated this to me one on one and thought that if the person feels they need to comment on the submission, they can set up a DM with the reviewer and staff. That way the voices can be heard and if their concerns hold water, the reviewer can require that changes be made.
“harassment” is not a well defined thing.
it worries me still because this could still be just anything that the other member finds frustrating or annoying.
I wanted to address this only with the concept of safety in mind. We live in a world where certain people use certain words as a veil for two-faced agendas, a nice way to say that people lie all the time. You can’t change human nature. The health and safety of people isn’t something we can really control and I had a guy claim a ‘panic attack’ to bully me off a discord thread before, as if the concept of walking away from his screen wasn’t an option. He wanted to make a fighter to surpass mine and I pointed out some things his would need to have to do that. Helping him build a submission better than mine caused a panic attack?.. yeah, sure, my wife is prone to panic attacks so I know what those actually look like. Even so I was the bad guy because he claimed HEALTH.
This is less related to new rules, and more focused on setting development: I think that we should try to minimize "grandfathering" with rules whenever possible. If something is being left in violation of restrictions to the setting (weapon counts for starships, speed restrictions, restrictions on certain technologies, et cetera), that can cause confusion if somebody wanted to make a similar addition to SARP that is, for lack of a better term, "worse" due to be compliant to rules.
Kaiyo Simulation Cup 2022I disagree, we are writing fiction not simulating a gritty reality. Our PCs are for the most part heroic character who should have plot armor. If someone wants to take that off, it's fine, but they should never be forced to.
Fundamentally, I disagree that SARP is a particularly simulationist community. "Simming" is a term from Star Trek RPs, whereas simulationist is a term to describe game systems that attempt maximum verisimilitude/detail. An example of a game like this might be Battletech or Attack Vector: Tactical. An RPG example would perhaps be Mekton. SARP, with perhaps the standout example of @Charmaylarg Dufrain's plots, tends to tell stories about heroic individuals overcoming all odds and being amazing, because they're just that good, just that lucky, or some other factor. It isn't a particularly gritty setting, regardless of whether or not distasteful actions are taken.Kaiyo Simulation Cup 2022
Resurgence Simulation Cup 2022
Countless more Sim Cups from Eucharis to Astral Reverie.
Sorry, what did you say? I can’t hear you over the sound of our award-winning RP website. Some thing about not simulating?
Our community is on another level, we don’t really need plot armor here. We are just naturally THAT GOOD. Also, there’s a very good reason why characters should be committed to the fallout of their actions. A common RP situation that I have seen is a disruptive jousting of words between characters, each writer, genuinely believing that their character is better, tougher, stronger. Having Metta rules that do not allow the other character to just punch him in the face creates the opportunity for players to be weenies towards each other without having to consider whether the dangerous person they are pissing off might try to punch them in the face for hurting their feelings!
Additionally, SARP is a gritty setting. Don’t believe me? Just read the NMX and Nepleslian articles. Even Yamatai has done a lot of very harsh and gritty things. Surely no one thinks that the Rikugun are a bunch of cheerleaders. Some might say that this setting isn’t post apocalyptic and therefore is not gritty. Just ask that to the people who are on Glimmergold or the freespacers!
Nah, SARP is better off without meta rules. I know common sense is the least common of all senses, but there’s only one way to get it and that’s by experience. Charging a machine gun is bad for your health, hugging a Mishu shouldn’t require a surgeon general warning to know it’s a bad idea.
I have confidence in my community to know what it is and isn’t a bad idea in the setting we built together.
EDIT: can’t believe anyone would downvote a decade of SARP excellence but I guess that’s democracy for you. I’ll quote this when I win us a simulation award.
You chose perhaps the best and worst examples for your point. In the first, two girls talk. In the second, an NPC grabs a gun and shoots herself. It's one of the grittiest representations on the site as a whole, bar none.
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