Atheism, Sex, and Databases: The Net as a Social Technology
The most important policy issue is how to balance people’s rights and responsibilities in electronic gatherings. Every group creates and sustains a shared understanding of the rights and responsibilities of membership – a social contract … Because electronic groups are both diverse and ephemeral, attempts to directly apply codes of conduct from the real world often go awry. Social influence is played out in a world that is rich in imagination and diversity and impoverished in its means of communication – ascii text … Electronic groups currently have few ways to deal with blatant misbehavior … It is much easier to suggest tools for groups than it is to suggest policies for how to balance people’s rights and responsibilities. We need much more discussion within groups themselves as well as in the broader policy community about group governance. We also need research that documents implicit codes of behavior and social-influence mechanisms across a wide variety of group types.
