🐱 Meet the app developer creating a simple tool that could slay all online trolls

CatParty


This is personal. I think my first experience of online bullying was probably 15 years ago when someone actually created a hate site dedicated to me during high school! But today the problem’s grown out of control: the surface area over which you can be attacked is just huge and the incivility is overwhelming.

I interned at Facebook in 2008, I was at Pinterest when it had just 10 employees and I was the second engineer hired to work on Quora. My time at these places taught me that you can’t just pull out content moderation from the platform as a separate problem. It’s built in to how these communities work: poorly designed mechanisms open up the potential for abuse.

I also saw what the lack of diversity and inclusion in Silicon Valley meant. It’s a place that has a habit of solving the problems of its own demographic. It seems like it’s trying to figure out: “What did mom do for me that I don’t want to do myself? Cook for me, do my laundry, drive me around.” It’s problematic to phrase it that way, but you get the point. If there aren’t folks who have had to deal with the bad stuff, that means solutions to these problems aren’t prioritised.

So, ultimately, I wanted to build the Block Partyapp to help everyone who deals with harassment and bullying on the internet. We didn’t need sophisticated AI to build something helpful. The way Block Party currently filters out harassment or bullying is via simple heuristics [rules].

For example, there’s an ‘I need a break mode’ where you won’t see mentions from people unless you follow them or they’re followed by the people you follow, they’re a verified user or you’ve interacted with them recently.

We collect everything else and put it in a folder which you can review later. This way, you don’t have to worry about missing out on anything but you do get to choose how and when you see things.

This approach means we don’t have to be perfect in classifying what’s okay or not, with some kind of machine-learning algorithm that reaches whatever accuracy. And how do you even define ‘correct’: what’s bullying and what’s not? Each person has their own threshold, and it changes depending on how you’re feeling. There are times when I’m ready to hear from the world and others where I’m just so exhausted with dealing with these people.

This strategy also means we can add other features. For instance, you can give others access to that folder, like friends or even the authorities, to look into the harassment. This is preferable to giving them my full Twitter credentials so that they see everything.

A lot of the current design of social platforms puts the onus on the victim to deal with the harassment. I did this Reddit AMA [Ask Me Anything] last summer and it ended up with 4,000 trolls brigading me. Reddit’s response was that they don’t condone harassment, and that I should report it. But I’m not going to sit there and report thousands of comments and accounts. It’s frustrating and potentially traumatising to put that burden on the person who has to deal with the abuse. A sharing system like ours, with delegated access, means you can have others help you.

We have a watchlist feature as well that lets you keep an eye on people. I once had someone who replied every time I tweeted and I didn’t want to see it, so I muted him. But then at some point he escalated to physically stalking me and I didn’t see it because of the muting. From that point on I had to regularly check his account to make sure I was going to be physically safe.

Ultimately, our goal is to get to a point where we won’t just build on top of existing software for platforms like Twitter or Instagram, but provide tools for new platforms that will help them avoid the same pitfalls. Think of it like payment processing in apps – a start-up doesn’t need to build that software, they just plug in a monetisation tool from someone else. Block Party could be that tool, and hopefully solve this problem for everyone.
 
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Maybe China was right to abort all those females.
 
But I’m not going to sit there and report thousands of comments and accounts.
If this idiot really sat down and read through thousands of negative comments they have a real problem. Also her AMA only received 2700 comments so I kind of doubt people went out of their way to send her messages privately in greater numbers.
I think my first experience of online bullying was probably 15 years ago when someone actually created a hate site dedicated to me during high school!
If someone goes to that length maybe you are kind of a bitch.
So, ultimately, I wanted to build the Block Partyapp to help everyone who deals with harassment and bullying on the internet.
Again I kind of get the impression this person's issue is that any criticism is received as bullying and that bores me.
 
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I have no idea what they're producing. It sounds like somekind of greasemonkey script with a toggleable whitelist that prevents you from seeing things not posted by people you follow, and any posts not on the whitelist are then archived so you hand them over to the police? "Hello 911, can you go through this folder of posts by people I don't follow to see if any of them are harassment, I'm too scared to do it myself"
 
We have a watchlist feature as well that lets you keep an eye on people. I once had someone who replied every time I tweeted and I didn’t want to see it, so I muted him. But then at some point he escalated to physically stalking me and I didn’t see it because of the muting. From that point on I had to regularly check his account to make sure I was going to be physically safe.

Wait, wait....
He's physically stalking you? Yeah, there are these things called restraining orders.
Also, wouldn't you "keeping an eye on people" and "regularly checking their accounts" when they're not interacting with you count as.... stalking?
Are you sure the others are the creepy stalkers here?
 
That's called the hide thread/post button.
It's not entirely new, you've just found a way to shift+click multiple comments; which again, isn't new. That, and evolution of the troll and the faggot will always take place, find a way to be smug about beating the troll? The troll will find a new way to mess with you.

The simplest rule is to simply not feed them ANY energy, and to shrug it off. What is so god damn hard about not feeding the troll?
 
Cyberbulling is the easiest thing to avoid.

1) Be proactive, not stupid. Think about what you want to post and consider the possible consequences and don't post clearly embarrassing shit.
2) There exists already a good way to keep yourself from getting nasty messages. It's called, oh wonder, the block button.
3) If it's all "too much" switch off the damn computer/tablet/smartphone and go hiking, read a book or do anything else not Social Media related.
4) Grow a thicker skin. Nasty words only hurt if you think they're true.
5) Laugh about the creative ways some retards are trying to get under your skin but don't react/reply/answer them.
6) If you feel extra bitter you can save all messages with clear illegal content and report them.
 
Cyberbulling is the easiest thing to avoid.

1) Be proactive, not stupid. Think about what you want to post and consider the possible consequences and don't post clearly embarrassing shit.
2) There exists already a good way to keep yourself from getting nasty messages. It's called, oh wonder, the block button.
3) If it's all "too much" switch off the damn computer/tablet/smartphone and go hiking, read a book or do anything else not Social Media related.
4) Grow a thicker skin. Nasty words only hurt if you think they're true.
5) Laugh about the creative ways some retards are trying to get under your skin but don't react/reply/answer them.
6) If you feel extra bitter you can save all messages with clear illegal content and report them.
I'd also add:

7) Don't tie your internet activity to your real identity in any way. It's much easier to mentally disconnect and not take stuff so personally when when you can just log off and stop being your internet self at any time.

But it's a moot point because per the article, this bitch has built her entire life and career around internet socializing. It's not the fact that internet bullies exist, it's that she embedded herself so deeply into a neurotic social environment that she can't escape. And she doesn't even notice.

Hey, you know what used to be a great way to socialize on the internet with only a smaller group of like-minded people instead of dealing with the general public? Forums.
 
Obligatory: Hahahahahahahaha How The Fuck Is Cyber Bullying Real Hahahaha Nigga Just Walk Away From The Screen Like Nigga Close Your Eyes Haha
That's called the hide thread/post button.
It's not entirely new, you've just found a way to shift+click multiple comments; which again, isn't new. That, and evolution of the troll and the faggot will always take place, find a way to be smug about beating the troll? The troll will find a new way to mess with you.

The simplest rule is to simply not feed them ANY energy, and to shrug it off. What is so god damn hard about not feeding the troll?
Cyberbulling is the easiest thing to avoid.

1) Be proactive, not stupid. Think about what you want to post and consider the possible consequences and don't post clearly embarrassing shit.
2) There exists already a good way to keep yourself from getting nasty messages. It's called, oh wonder, the block button.
3) If it's all "too much" switch off the damn computer/tablet/smartphone and go hiking, read a book or do anything else not Social Media related.
4) Grow a thicker skin. Nasty words only hurt if you think they're true.
5) Laugh about the creative ways some retards are trying to get under your skin but don't react/reply/answer them.
6) If you feel extra bitter you can save all messages with clear illegal content and report them.
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Reading between the lines, you've got somebody whose entire career is dedicated to working with data mining platforms and selling users content back to them.

What this represents is an attempt to streamline interaction online as a sort of Skinner box. Creating safe spaces and acting as a political officer are just two layers of the onion. This tech can also be used for doing the very things it's supposed to protect the users from. It's just a matter of time before anonymous users can be unmasked via heuristics, but the solution may likely be applications that vary diction and word choice in online posting automatically.

Yes, in the future we may build machines to bullicide trannies for us. God bless the internet.
 
my first experience of online bullying was probably 15 years ago when someone actually created a hate site dedicated to me during high school!
I interned at Facebook in 2008, I was at Pinterest when it had just 10 employees and I was the second engineer hired to work on Quora.
This right there is the problem. This person is so repulsive and disgusting that other people felt the need to make whole websites about how terrible they were, and yet they manage to weasel them self into positions of power. This person should have never survived high school.
 
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