AndrewHickey comments on How to deal with someone in a LessWrong meeting being creepy - Less Wrong

16 Post author: Douglas_Reay 09 September 2012 04:41AM

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Comment author: RomanDavis 08 September 2012 12:17:31AM *  16 points [-]

So, my social skills are not great. Aren't even really good. But over the last few years, I've gotten so much better from where I was that it's ridiculous.

Anyway, I wish people, particularly women, had been that open with me about my behavior.

Let me be clear: the scenario you present almost never happens. Now, if it does happens, yes, the creep involved has no excuse but to stop. But the signals people, and particularly woman, give off can be much more obscure if you don't know what you're doing.

Comment author: [deleted] 08 September 2012 01:05:17AM 1 point [-]

The scenario may not have happened to you. That doesn't mean it 'almost never happens'.

If you haven't been told that you're doing anything wrong, then obviously you can't be blamed for carrying on. My point is only that if you have been told, you shouldn't be waiting for some quorum to come to a conclusion, just stop doing the thing that is upsetting the other person.

Comment author: RomanDavis 08 September 2012 01:43:11AM *  13 points [-]

They totally told me I was doing things wrong. All the time. It's just they were doing so in a code I didn't understand and expecting me to operate by rules I wasn't told about. If a woman did something like this seven years ago, (And, while the same thing didn't happen, a lot of the subtler cues did.), I would have done the same things the man did. I was never, ever told, "Hey man, you're being creepy. Cut it out." I wouldn't have known what to do, and I would have done the exact wrong thing.

I wouldn't do it now. I'm roughly as good of a person as I was then, I just understand the rules better.

Comment author: [deleted] 08 September 2012 03:33:22PM 0 points [-]

Saying "You do NOT touch me" or "Don't want to talk about this", as that person did, is not a code.

Comment author: MixedNuts 08 September 2012 03:48:39PM 7 points [-]

Great! Now speak in non-code when people are approaching the line, not five miles past it.

Comment author: TheOtherDave 08 September 2012 04:23:29PM 12 points [-]

If (1) a population varies widely in terms of how direct a demand needs to be before they recognize it as one, and
(2) framing a demand much more directly than necessary for a particular target to recognize it is viewed as socially inappropriate ("hey, OK, you don't have to make a federal case out of it lady! Jeez. Some people have no friggin sense of proportion, y'know?"), and
(3) framing a demand much more weakly than necessary is both ineffective (that is, my demand gets ignored) and viewed as socially inappropriate when I eventually ramp up to the necessary level of directness...

...well, you tell me: what should I do in that situation, when there's a demand I want to make of an individual whose sensitivity to demands I don't know?

Comment author: MixedNuts 08 September 2012 06:17:36PM 9 points [-]

You forgot (4): not recognizing a demand and refusing to comply are indistinguishable.

Comment author: wedrifid 08 September 2012 06:52:44PM 0 points [-]

You forgot (4): not recognizing a demand and refusing to comply are indistinguishable.

Can be. Depending how the refusing is done I'd even suggest that not recognizing can be 'creepier'.

Comment author: Antisuji 09 September 2012 02:21:19AM 5 points [-]

This is troubling if true. The worst offenders described in the OP's links are creepers of the latter type, who know their behavior is bad but do it anyway. And yet this is seen as not as creepy as behavior from someone who is socially inept but not malicious?

Comment author: wedrifid 09 September 2012 03:49:49AM 1 point [-]

The worst offenders described in the OP's links are creepers of the latter type, who know their behavior is bad but do it anyway. And yet this is seen as not as creepy as behavior from someone who is socially inept but not malicious?

No.

Comment author: TheOtherDave 08 September 2012 07:26:26PM 0 points [-]

Can you clarify why you consider this something I forgot?