Saturday, December 28, 2013

'Bye Bye, Bile? Websites Try to Nix Nasty Comments' - (1) Such a teensy percentage of violent threats is a non-issue and can be blocked by word-recognition software; (2) References to the lawless 'Wild West' are telling, since our multiculturalist open-borders overlords are essentially lawless, unaccountable to the electorate; (3) And since it was brought up, why is every advertiser from Cheerios to Amazon Prime to You Name It Corporation pushing interracial marriage when that would account for such a tiny percentage of their potential customer base? (4) The Tolerance Police are not really afraid of hate, it is facts and science that scares them, such as the staggeringly disproportionate black-on-white violent crime rate and the major black v. white IQ differences.

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Bye bye, bile? Websites try to nix nasty comments

By BARBARA ORTUTAY
NEW YORK (AP) - Mix blatant bigotry with poor spelling. Add a dash of ALL CAPS. Top it off with a violent threat. And there you have it: A recipe for the worst of online comments, scourge of the Internet.
Blame anonymity, blame politicians, blame human nature. But a growing number of websites are reining in the Wild West of online commentary. Companies including Google and the Huffington Post are trying everything from deploying moderators to forcing people to use their real names in order to restore civil discourse. Some sites, such as Popular Science, are banning comments altogether.
The efforts put sites in a delicate position. User comments add a lively, fresh feel to videos, stories and music. And, of course, the longer visitors stay to read the posts, and the more they come back, the more a site can charge for advertising.
What websites don't want is the kind of off-putting nastiness that spewed forth under a recent CNN.com article about the Affordable Care Act.
"If it were up to me, you progressive libs destroying this country would be hanging from the gallows for treason. People are awakening though. If I were you, I'd be very afraid," wrote someone using the name "JBlaze."
YouTube, which is owned by Google, has long been home to some of the Internet's most juvenile and grammatically incorrect comments. The site caused a stir last month when it began requiring people to log into Google Plus to write a comment. Besides herding users to Google's unified network, the company says the move is designed to raise the level of discourse in the conversations that play out under YouTube videos.
One such video, a Cheerios commercial featuring an interracial family, met with such a barrage of racist responses on YouTube in May that General Mills shut down comments on it altogether. . . .