Update: Ruby and I have posted moderator notices for Duncan and Said in this thread. This was a set of fairly difficult moderation calls on established users and it seems good for the LessWrong userbase to have the opportunity to evaluate it and respond. I'm stickying this post for a day-or-so.
Recently there's been a series of posts and comment back-and-forth between Said Achmiz and Duncan Sabien, which escalated enough that it seemed like site moderators should weigh in.
For context, a quick recap of recent relevant events as I'm aware of them are. (I'm glossing over many details that are relevant but getting everything exactly right is tricky)
- Duncan posts Basics of Rationalist Discourse. Said writes some comments in response.
- Zack posts "Rationalist Discourse" Is Like "Physicist Motors", which Duncan and Said argue some more and Duncan eventually says "goodbye" which I assume coincides with banning Said from commenting further on Duncan's posts.
- I publish LW Team is adjusting moderation policy. Lionhearted suggests "Basics of Rationalist Discourse" as a standard the site should uphold. Paraphrasing here, Said objects to a post being set as the site standards if not all non-banned users can discuss it. More discussion ensues.
- Duncan publishes Killing Socrates, a post about a general pattern of LW commenting that alludes to Said but doesn't reference him by name. Commenters other than Duncan do bring up Said by name, and the discussion gets into "is Said net positive/negative for LessWrong?" in a discussion section where Said can't comment.
- @gjm publishes On "aiming for convergence on truth", which further discusses/argues a principle from Basics of Rationalist Discourse that Said objected to. Duncan and Said argue further in the comments. I think it's a fair gloss to say "Said makes some comments about what Duncan did, which Duncan says are false enough that he'd describe Said as intentionally lying about them. Said objects to this characterization" (although exactly how to characterize this exchange is maybe a crux of discussion)
LessWrong moderators got together for ~2 hours to discuss this overall situation, and how to think about it both as an object-level dispute and in terms of some high level "how do the culture/rules/moderation of LessWrong work?".
I think we ended up with fairly similar takes, but, getting to the point that we all agree 100% on what happened and what to do next seemed like a longer project, and we each had subtly different frames about the situation. So, some of us (at least Vaniver and I, maybe others) are going to start by posting some top level comments here. People can weigh in the discussion. I'm not 100% sure what happens after that, but we'll reflect on the discussion and decide on whether to take any high-level mod actions.
If you want to weigh in, I encourage you to take your time even if there's a lot of discussion going on. If you notice yourself in a rapid back and forth that feels like it's escalating, take at least a 10 minute break and ask yourself what you're actually trying to accomplish.
I do note: the moderation team will be making an ultimate call on whether to take any mod actions based on our judgment. (I'll be the primary owner of the decision, although I expect if there's significant disagreement among the mod team we'll talk through it a lot). We'll take into account arguments various people post, but we aren't trying to reflect the wisdom of crowds.
So if you may want to focus on engaging with our cruxes rather than what other random people in the comments think.
I did, thanks.
I think gjm's comment was missing the observation that "comment that just ask for examples" are themselves an example of "unproductive modes of discussion where he is constantly demanding more and more rigour and detail from his interlocutors while not providing it himself", and so it wasn't cleanly about "balance: required or not?". I think a reasonable reader could come away from that comment of gjm's uncertain whether or not Said simply saying "examples?" would count as an example.
My interpretation of this section is basically the double crux dots arguing over the labels they should have, with Said disagreeing strenuously with calling his mode "unproductive" (and elsewhere over whether labor is good or bad, or how best to minimize it) and moving from the concrete examples to an abstract pattern (I suspect because he thinks the former is easier to defend than the latter).
I should also note here that I don't think you have explicitly staked out that you think Said just saying "examples?" is bad (like, you didn't here, which was the obvious place to), I am inferring that from various things you've written (and, tho this source is more suspect and so has less influence, ways other people have reacted to Said before).
Importantly, I think Said's more valid point was narrower, not broader, and the breadth was the 'strawmanning' part of it. (If you mean to refer to the point dealing with the broader context, I agree with that.) The invalid "Duncan's rule against horses" turning into the valid "Duncan's rule against white horses". If you don't have other rules against horses--you're fine with brown ones and black one and chestnut ones and so on--I think that points towards your rule against white horses pretty clearly. [My model of you thinks that language is for compiling into concepts instead of pointing at concepts and so "Duncan's rule against horses" compiles into "Duncan thinks horses should be banned" which is both incorrect and wildly inconsistent with the evidence. I think language is for both, and when one gives you a nonsense result, you should check the other.]
I will note a way here in which it is not quite fair that I am saying "I think you didn't do a reasonable level of interpretive labor when reading Said", in the broader context of your complaint that Said doesn't do much interpretive labor (deliberately!). I think it is justified by the difference in how the two of you respond to the failure of that labor.
I am trying to place the faux pas not in that you "reacted at all to that prompt" but "how you reacted to the prompt". More in the next section.
I think this point is our core disagreement. I see the second comment saying "yeah, Duncan's rule against horses, the thing where he dislikes white ones", and you proceeding as if he just said "Duncan's rule against horses." I think there was a illusion of transparency behind "specifically reaffirmed by Said".
Like, I think if you had said "STRAWMAN!" and tried to get us to put a scarlet S in Said's username, this would have been a defensible accusation, and the punishment unusual but worth considering. Instead I think you said "LIAR!" and that just doesn't line up with my reading of the thread (tho I acknowledge disagreement about the boundary between 'lying' and 'strawmanning') or my sense of how to disagree properly. In my favorite world, you call it a mislabeling and identify why you think the label fails to match (again, noting that gjm attempted to do so, tho I think not in a way that bridged the gap).
I mean, for sure I wish Said had done things differently! I described them in some detail, and not strawmanning you so hard in the first place was IMO the core one.
When I say "locally", I am starting the clock at Killing Socrates, which was perhaps unclear.
Do you think Said would not also stop if, for every post he read on LW, he found that someone else had already made the comment he would have liked to have made?
(I do see a difference where the outcomes you seek to achieve are more easily obtained with mod powers backing them up, but I don't think that affects the primary point.)
So, over here Elizabeth 'summarizes' Said in an unflattering way, and Said objects. I don't think I will reliably see such comments before those mentioned in them do (there were only 23 minutes before Said objected) and it is not obvious to me that LW would be improved by me also objecting now.
But perhaps our disagreement is that, on seeing Elizabeth's comment, I didn't have a strong impulse to 'set the record straight'; I attribute that mostly to not seeing Elizabeth's comment as "the record," tho I'm open to arguments that I should.