审议
匿名
代理(统计)
互联网隐私
背景(考古学)
身份(音乐)
集合(抽象数据类型)
在线讨论
质量(理念)
价值(数学)
计算机科学
点(几何)
论证(复杂分析)
广告
社会心理学
心理学
计算机安全
认识论
万维网
业务
政治学
政治
法学
美学
几何学
机器学习
数学
生物化学
生物
程序设计语言
化学
古生物学
哲学
作者
Alfred Moore,Rolf Fredheim,Dominik Wyss,Simon Beste
标识
DOI:10.1177/0032321719891385
摘要
How do identity rules influence online deliberation? We address this question by drawing on a data set of 45 million comments on news articles on the Huffington Post from January 2013 to May 2015. At the beginning of this period, the site allowed commenting under what we call non-durable pseudonyms. In December 2013, Huffington Post moved to regulate its forum by requiring users to authenticate their accounts. And in June 2014, Huffington Post outsourced commenting to Facebook altogether, approximating a ‘real-name’ environment. We find a significant increase in the cognitive complexity of comments (a proxy for one aspect of deliberative quality) during the middle phase, followed by a decrease following the shift to real-name commenting through Facebook. Our findings challenge the terms of the apparently simple trade-off between the goods and bads of anonymous and real-name environments and point to the potential value of durable pseudonymity in the context of online discussion.
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