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No, this is far far from the correct history. And I don't understand why all the other cruft is in there either. Reverting this edit would be a big mistake.
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In the fields of [[Internet]] discussion and [[forum moderation]], '''disemvoweling''' is a technique used to [[Censorship|censor]] unwanted postings such as [[forum spam|spam]], [[internet trolling]], rudeness or criticism and yet maintain some transparency, both of the act and the underlying word. Disemvoweling (also spelled ''disemvowelling'') appears to model the word "[[disemboweling]]" and involves removing [[vowel]]s from questionable text, either as a form of self-censorship or as a technique used by [[forum moderator]]s and newsgroup operators. The net effect of disemvoweling text is illegibility or legibility only through significant [[cognitive load|cognitive effort]]; thus the technique helps to suppress unwanted comments.
In the fields of [[Internet]] discussion and [[forum moderation]], '''disemvoweling''' is a technique used to [[Censorship|censor]] unwanted postings such as [[forum spam|spam]], [[internet trolling]], rudeness or criticism and yet maintain some transparency, both of the act and the underlying word. Disemvoweling (also spelled ''disemvowelling'') appears to model the word "[[disemboweling]]" and involves removing [[vowel]]s from questionable text, either as a form of self-censorship or as a technique used by [[forum moderator]]s and newsgroup operators. The net effect of disemvoweling text is illegibility or legibility only through significant [[cognitive load|cognitive effort]]; thus the technique helps to suppress unwanted comments.


[[Teresa Nielsen Hayden]] developed the technique in [[2002]] for internet forum moderation on her blog ''Making Light''. It was implemented in [[2007]] on the blog ''[[Boing Boing]]'' when she joined as community manager. <ref>Used as a forum moderation method as early as [[November 21]], [[2002]] by [[Teresa Nielsen Hayden]] on [http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/001551.html#8717 ''Making Light'']. This was termed "disemvoweling" by [http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/001551.html#8725 Arthur D. Hlavaty in that thread, later the same day].</ref><ref>Hayden joined Boing Boing in November 2007 and implemented disemvowelling as a tool to manage the blog's newly relaunched user discussion threads [http://www.boingboing.net/2007/11/05/boing-boings-new-com.html ''Boing Boing'']</ref><ref>Cited as a synonym for [[splat out]] in [[Eric S. Raymond]]'s [[Jargon File]] [http://jargon-file.org/archive/jargon-4.3.0.dos.txt v4.3.0, April 30, 2001]</ref> Regarding the use of disemvoweling to police internet blog comment sections, [[Xeni Jardin]], co-editor of ''[[Boing Boing]]'', says of the practice, "the dialogue stays, but the misanthrope looks ridiculous, and the emotional sting is neutralized."<ref>{{cite web|
Disemvowelling was developed on Usenet to moderate groups and prevent [[flamewars]], where it was more commonly known as ''Splat-Out''. It was implemented in [[2007]] on the blog ''[[Boing Boing]]''. [[Xeni Jardin]], co-editor of ''[[Boing Boing]]'', says of the practice, "the dialogue stays, but the misanthrope looks ridiculous, and the emotional sting is neutralized."<ref>{{cite web|
title=Online Communities Rot Without Daily Tending By Human Hands|
title=Online Communities Rot Without Daily Tending By Human Hands|
author=Xeni Jardin|
author=Xeni Jardin|

Revision as of 09:39, 31 August 2009

In the fields of Internet discussion and forum moderation, disemvoweling is a technique used to censor unwanted postings such as spam, internet trolling, rudeness or criticism and yet maintain some transparency, both of the act and the underlying word. Disemvoweling (also spelled disemvowelling) appears to model the word "disemboweling" and involves removing vowels from questionable text, either as a form of self-censorship or as a technique used by forum moderators and newsgroup operators. The net effect of disemvoweling text is illegibility or legibility only through significant cognitive effort; thus the technique helps to suppress unwanted comments.

Disemvowelling was developed on Usenet to moderate groups and prevent flamewars, where it was more commonly known as Splat-Out. It was implemented in 2007 on the blog Boing Boing. Xeni Jardin, co-editor of Boing Boing, says of the practice, "the dialogue stays, but the misanthrope looks ridiculous, and the emotional sting is neutralized."[1] Also, Boing Boing producers claim that disemvoweling sends a clear message to internet forums as to types of behavior that are unacceptable.[2] Gawker Media sites adopted disemvowelling as a moderation tool in August 2008, further popularizing its use. [3]

In July 2008, New York Times reporter Noam Cohen criticized disemvoweling as a moderation tool, citing a June 2008 dispute about the deletion of all posts on Boing Boing that mentioned sex columnist Violet Blue. In the Boing Boing comment threads resulting from this controversy, Teresa Nielsen Hayden used the disemvoweling technique. Cohen noted that disemvoweling was "Not quite censorship, but not quite unfettered commentary either."[4] A subsequent unsigned case study on online crisis communication asserted that "removing the vowels from participants’ comments only increased the gulf between the editors and the community" during the controversy.[5]

On October 30, 2008, Time magazine listed disemvoweling as #42 of their "Top 50 Inventions of 2008,"[6] despite its having been developed six years earlier. The Time article made no mention of Teresa Nielsen Hayden or Boing Boing.


Example

This original sentence:

In the fields of Internet discussion and forum moderation, disemvoweling (also spelled disemvowelling) is the removal of vowels from text.

would be disemvowelled to look like this:

n th flds f ntrnt dscssn nd frm mdrtn, dsmvwlng (ls splld dsmvwllng) s th rmvl f vwls frm txt.

Technique

The technique has been facilitated by plug-in filters to automate the process. Because the letter y is sometimes a vowel and sometimes a consonant, there are a variety of ways to treat it. To remove it only where it is used as a vowel is not easily automated. Aside from an "all-or-nothing" approach, one option is remove a y only at the end of words, where it is virtually always a vowel.[7]

The word follows the standard patterns of English orthography; i.e., it may be spelled either disemvoweling or disemvowelling, with the former generally preferred in U.S. English and the latter preferred in British, Commonwealth and Irish English.

References

  1. ^ Xeni Jardin. "Online Communities Rot Without Daily Tending By Human Hands". The Edge Annual Question 2008. Edge.
  2. ^ Cory Doctorow (14 May, 2007). "How To Keep Hostile Jerks From Taking Over Your Online Community". Information Week. TechWeb Business Technology Network. Retrieved 2007-05-15. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ [1]
  4. ^ Cohen, Noam Poof! You're Unpublished The New York Times
  5. ^ "Online Crisis Communications: Your First Statement Is Crucial". PR News Online. July 21, 2008. Retrieved 2008-11-04. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. ^ "42. Disemvoweling - 50 Best Inventions 2008". Time. October 30, 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-30. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  7. ^ Scholastic Teaching Resources, Scholastic, Accessed August 09, 2006

Further reading