dwchang wrote:
As for public shamings, perhaps I'm in the minority, but I am all for it. Given I am an advocate of the death penalty and believe it is a deterent and in this case, I feel that if the community is made aware of the people doing this and that they can be caught, in turn it means less people will do it (b/c they know they can be caught now).
Wow, from opinion abuse to the
death penalty. AMVs must be
serious business.
In any case, there was a system proposed for silently ignoring opinions from people who are obviously abusing the opinion feature. I think that's good enough.
Outright public humiliation, although generally humorous, is, I think, somewhat unnecessary -- and the analogy is blatantly false, anyway. Capital punishment appeals to survival instincts as a deterrent (and, even then, its effectiveness is questionable -- but never mind that.) Humiliation over the
Web...well, what does that do?
It attaches a stigma to a given handle. Possibly an IP and MAC address. None of those, unlike
life, are a permanent attribute of an individual.
You may drive away weak-willed trolls, but you will not stop others with this. Particularly capable trolls will simply change their handle and identifying addresses and keep going at it, fueled by the knowledge that their actions will win them
recognition and
fame. Well, it's infamy, but that's good enough.
Hence my

at your analogy. There just isn't any connection between the two concepts as a deterrent, except at the most superficial level.
If you
really must stroke your id, just wait until the target of a silent ignore starts asking why her or his opinions no longer count towards anything. Then it's off to the verbal electric chair, I suppose.