Jazmac
New member
Gee Cori was that off the top of your head ... :winktongue:
Good words.
I for once actually read all of that...and that don't happen too often :smile:
What he said ^^
Gee Cori was that off the top of your head ... :winktongue:
Good words.
I for once actually read all of that...and that don't happen too often :smile:
When I said the word criticism I meant criticism.There is criticism and there is whining/trolling.
Criticism: Xbox Music is missing old features such as "..." and needs work
Whining: Xbox Music IS A PIECE OF CRAP! Microsoft, YOU SUCK! I'm moving to Android/iPhone!
See the difference?
Not sure what that has to do with anything but fill your bootsI'd go out on a limb and say no one has ever been banned for saying that Xbox music is missing old features.
Not sure what that has to do with anything but fill your boots
I'd go out on a limb and say no one has ever been banned for saying that Xbox music is missing old features.
So you made up an example, pinned it to what I said about criticism, and basically made it out like that is what I am saying... Um OK, gotcha.You said: "There's also a small subset of mods and members here who genuinely feel that criticism should be a bannable offense." That statement is completely incorrect, and I used his example of "criticism" to make that point. People that get banned are doing something much more elaborate than merely offering constructive criticism of Windows products. To suggest that WC doesn't tolerate criticism is disingenuous at best.
Yes.Sorry, But did Microsoft make your music app stop working ? Did everyone else that has that same app have the same problem? Did everyone dislike the new design of Onedrive ? should they change it just for you ? They made some changes you did not like but others did, should they change them back for you, then the others would be unhappy. I can see nothing wrong with voicing your opinion and saying what you like and what you don't that's how things get better. But you can't make everyone happy, you take the good with the bad and move on. But on here they just keep ******** and moaning about the same things over and over and over again. And most of the problems are owner caused and has nothing to do with the OS. And it is the same on the Apple forums and the Android.
If someone is obviously trollin, you can ignore them. If someone has a legitimate gripe, engage in conversationHow can we deal with trolls other than just plain ol' banning them? Also if we all rise up to tamp them down they will just whine even more about not being allowed to criticize Windows products/software.
(Jonnaver this is not a comment to your post at all. I promise. I agree that we can't swing to the "Microsoft is Perfect" end either)
If someone is obviously trollin, you can ignore them. If someone has a legitimate gripe, engage in conversation
The biggest commotions aren't caused by one kind of poster, but several types mixing in a thread like matter and antimatter. It just won't end wellIgnore AND REPORT them. That's what the exclamation mark at the top right of each post is for.
Engaging, responding to, and worst of all, quoting troll posts, is one of the most common mistakes WC members make. At that point it's: Troll wins, you lose, because you've then given them precisely that attention and outrage that trolls feed on, and unfortunately for internet forums, there are far too many who just can't wait to fall into that trap.
However, I don't think the obvious trolls are our biggest problem. They are few and far between and often quickly banned. They are just nuisances, similar to spammers. The biggest commotions are caused by a completely different kind of poster.
I don't think the obvious trolls are our biggest problem. They are few and far between and often quickly banned. They are just nuisances, similar to spammers. The biggest commotions are caused by a completely different kind of poster.
I think a good rule of thumb is the "would I say it publicly" test. If the answer is no, then why would it be acceptable to say it online?
I think a good rule of thumb is the "would I say it publicly" test. If the answer is no, then why would it be acceptable to say it online? This conjures up an image of walking into a bar to meet your friends and announcing "Windows Phone is dead! I'm tired of being treated this way by Microsoft! If they can't fix Xbox music I'm getting an iPhone!" I would hope that my friends would slap me silly if I told them something like that. Anonymity shouldn't be a license to be insolent or petulant.
This isn't a bar though where I agree that would be a weird and totally random thing to say. This is a forum specific to this kind of discussion. A better analogy would be if you belonged to a group of friends or coworkers all into tech and you walked into a discussion about smart phones and said, "I'm not happy with the decisions MS is making with WP, especially Xbox music. My next phone will probably be an iPhone if they don't get this stuff sorted out".
It's not rude but is more in keeping with something you might say publicly or anonymously.