- Joined
- Feb 9, 2020
SCP-6283: LOOK AT ME SO TRANSGRESSIVE AND I DONT EVEN CARE LOOLOLOL WACKY STUFF INSIDEZ IT’S GOOD THOSCP-80085-J: THE TITLE IS IN ALL CAPS SO YOU CAN TAKE THIS SERIOUSLY I SWEAR
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
SCP-6283: LOOK AT ME SO TRANSGRESSIVE AND I DONT EVEN CARE LOOLOLOL WACKY STUFF INSIDEZ IT’S GOOD THOSCP-80085-J: THE TITLE IS IN ALL CAPS SO YOU CAN TAKE THIS SERIOUSLY I SWEAR
In his articles he tends to respond to any criticism with dismissive one-word posts like "Okay."While Kaktus acts tough when called out indirectly, such as making Twitter posts when he's called out out here, I can tell you from personal experience that he's a complete pussy when approached directly. He's prone to leaving chats when confronted or challenged in the slightest, his ego is extremely fragile when he's in the spotlight.
SCP-041-J: Lyris and The Other One Nobody Gives A Shit About 2: Electric BoogalooSCP-6283: LOOK AT ME SO TRANSGRESSIVE AND I DONT EVEN CARE LOOLOLOL WACKY STUFF INSIDEZ IT’S GOOD THO
He used to do that, but someone high up on staff (I think Magnus?) actually told him to stop being an ass for once, so he stopped. There was a period afterwards where he tried responding with obviously fake friendliness, but these days I think he's just stopped responding to random people not liking his articles altogether.In his articles he tends to respond to any criticism with dismissive one-word posts like "Okay."
So the forum equivalent of leaving the chat, then. Typical.but these days I think he's just stopped responding to random people not liking his articles altogether.
It's for the best, honestly. Responding to every random anon who says mean things about your writing isn't healthy. Of course, I have no doubt that he still wants to respond to every negative remark he gets, but it's not worth the effort and he seems to have realized that.So the forum equivalent of leaving the chat, then. Typical.
"Hm. I can't imagine ever saying something like that about anyone else's work that they put time into, so. Cool."In his articles he tends to respond to any criticism with dismissive one-word posts like "Okay."
I guess he needs to imagine a little harder."Hm. I can't imagine ever saying something like that about anyone else's work that they put time into, so. Cool."
& if they don’t fold they’ll at least show their true colorsWhen staff do something fucked up, complain. Get loud. If you make a big enough fuss, people will take notice, and some will side with you. If it gets big enough, staff will listen to you. As @bettermybutter has demonstrated, staff completely fold when you apply pressure to them. They're used to having control of the narrative outside of fringe discussions like this thread and a few Tumblr communities, and they panic when it looks like that control is slipping. Take advantage of that.
I’m glad that DDD got deleted - it shows that they’re at least sensitive to optics when someone embarrassed them or threatens the appearance of the wiki being a safe place
I've talked about this before, but to me the core of the problem is that the systems they have in place encourage authors to focus on writing things that sell so they can be "successful". To most people on the wiki, "success" is writing something that either escapes deletion or reaches a certain upvote milestone, and you get that kind of success by writing popular articles, not good articles. When you have this kind of setup, the most popular authors are inevitably the authors who are the most willing to sell their souls to the numbers game, and as it turns out there's a lot of overlap between that crowd and massive egotists.Anyone who’s read this thread will know that the “safe space” at SCP is one for egos and questionable characters to be emboldened to express the unsavory parts of themselves with no anticipation or delivery of a reckoning. That’s how you grow a Bright.
I think what happens is that an author gets validation by the reception of their writing and equivocates that validation to the whole of their persona. They take it as an “OK” to come out of their shell, and bring their unrelated beliefs & baggage with them. Kind of like how some professionals take their expertise in a very specialized area — say a doctor — and think that because their opinion is valued in that field, that also applies to other, unrelated contexts where they are not exemplary, like politics or ethics. Or, in the case of SCP, both.
So with the massive influx of popularity brought in initially by the Containment Breach game, you suddenly have the closest thing you are going to get to an internet D-list literary celeb (even then, only in-community, the satellite audience which makes up the largest part of the popularity don’t pay any attention to who actually wrote an article). What would be a backstop to the overgrowth of this misuse of celebrity (group morality) is dulled by the examples set, and also by germinating delusions of grandeur that other authors hope to have pacified too. This is why you have asymmetrical punishment for different classes of users. It takes extraordinary circumstances and PR pressure to apply the same discipline that’s very casually and routinely applied to a lesser user.
People like Bright, countless others, and now their spiritual front-runner Kaktus, let the attention go to their heads, and it makes for a very bad culture of obsession with reception/upvotes, rabid & child-like defensiveness to criticisms, censorship and example-making of dissent, and generally an empire-like mentality with regards to one’s reputation.
The praise and attention, not a bad thing in and of itself, becomes a sort of rat poison for those who don’t have the discipline, awareness, or wisdom to self-limit their intake of if to small doses. You get people like Kaktus who has probably 100 keywords programmed into his IRC chat settings that will ping him if he is even remotely (or even possibly) mentioned - not to engage with others but more to surveil the pulse of his brand; and act accordingly if needed.
But that is changing. As much as I dislike SCP, I’d rather see them rehabilitated than brought down.
What's so ridiculous about this is that authors aren't even making money off their work. All this drama is over something that has no physical link to the real world, it's just people going rabid over fake internet pointsI've talked about this before, but to me the core of the problem is that the systems they have in place encourage authors to focus on writing things that sell so they can be "successful". To most people on the wiki, "success" is writing something that either escapes deletion or reaches a certain upvote milestone, and you get that kind of success by writing popular articles, not good articles. When you have this kind of setup, the most popular authors are inevitably the authors who are the most willing to sell their souls to the numbers game, and as it turns out there's a lot of overlap between that crowd and massive egotists.
What's so ridiculous about this is that authors aren't even making money off their work. All this drama is over something that has no physical link to the real world, it's just people going rabid over fake internet points
It reminds me of a phenomenon you often see in academic communities and universities where the more utterly tiny the amount of power in question is, the more petty and spiteful the fights over it become.What's so ridiculous about this is that authors aren't even making money off their work. All this drama is over something that has no physical link to the real world, it's just people going rabid over fake internet points
You more or less ninjaed me here but there's a strange universality to this kind of power fighting.The smaller the stakes are, the nastier the fights get. Of all the epic shit-flinging drama I've seen, like 80% of it started over some really petty crap.
The points are fake, but the effect they have on people who care too much about them is very real. You also see this with things like karma-obsessed people on Reddit and sticker spergs here on the Farms. When meaningless Internet points are tallied and can be used to compare oneself to others, there are inevitably people who value them way too much and will do anything to get them.What's so ridiculous about this is that authors aren't even making money off their work. All this drama is over something that has no physical link to the real world, it's just people going rabid over fake internet points
It's time for me to come clean, the only reason I have done anything ever at all was for the "Mm, Yeah" trophy. That's a whole 10 trophy points, if I get 45 I can be within 500 yards of a playground or elementary school.The points are fake, but the effect they have on people who care too much about them is very real. You also see this with things like karma-obsessed people on Reddit and sticker spergs here on the Farms. When meaningless Internet points are tallied and can be used to compare oneself to others, there are inevitably people who value them way too much and will do anything to get them.
The ALL CAPS TITLES FOR NO REASON got old really fast.
CAPSLOCK IS CRUISE CONTROL FOR DROOL.Forgot to reply to this. Oh man, I forgot about those. I might have seen one or two where it was okay, caps lock has its purpose in documents, but otherwise they just fail.