Tag Team Trolling is a form of vigilante censorship.  They respond to each
other's comments with inane criticisms that have zero, nothing, nada to do
with the science behind the claims.  The purpose of such comments is
flamebait so that there is a response leading to the pulling of the thread
since the moderation is one sided.  It is also that, since they know little
else about the science and their intention is to act like seagulls, they
deliver seagull shit all over the LENR thread so that some lurker who
visits the thread will be forewarned that they will be flamed if they voice
any kind of scientific or positive opinion.

They are simply acting like assholes, and the standard response of ignoring
trolls does not work because they are a GANG of trolls.

http://phys.org/news/2013-02-trolls-rude-blog-comments-dim.html

*The trolls are winning. Pick a story about some aspect of science, any
story, scroll down to the blog comments and let the bashing begin. *

"Wonder how much taxpayer cash went into this 'deep' study?"
"I think you can take all these studies by pointy headed scientists, 99
percent of whom are socialists and communists, and stick them where the sun
don't shine."
"Yawn. Climate change myth wackos at it again."

"This article is 100 percent propaganda crapola."
"Speaking of dolts, if you were around in the 70s, when they also had
scientists, the big talk then was about the coming ice age. And don't give
me any of that carbon emission bull@!$%#."

Read more at:
http://phys.org/news/2013-02-trolls-rude-blog-comments-dim.html#jCp

Such nasty back and forth, like it or not, is now a staple of our news
diet, and in the realm of online science news, the diatribes, screeds and
rants are taking a toll on the public perception of science and technology,
according to a study by researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.


UW-Madison science communication researcher Dominique Brossard < /br> study
showing the tone of blog comments alone can influence the perception of
risk posed by nanotechnology, the science of manipulating materials at the
smallest scales.
The study, now in press at the Journal of Computer Mediated Communication,
was supported by the National Science Foundation. It sampled a
representative cross section of 2,338 Americans in an online experiment,
where the civility of blog comments was manipulated. For example,
introducing name calling into commentary tacked onto an otherwise balanced
newspaper blog post, the study showed, could elicit either lower or higher
perceptions of risk, depending on one's predisposition to the science of
nanotechnology.
"It seems we don't really have a clear social norm about what is expected
online," says Brossard, a UW-Madison professor of Life Science
Communication, contrasting online forums with public meetings where
prescribed decorum helps keep discussion civil. "In the case of blog
postings, it's the Wild West."
For rapidly developing nanotechnology, a technology already built into more
than 1,300 consumer products, exposure to uncivil online comments is one of
several variables that can directly influence the perception of risk
associated with it.
"When people encounter an unfamiliar issue like nanotechnology, they often
rely on an existing value such as religiosity or deference to science to
form a judgment," explains Ashley Anderson, a postdoctoral fellow in the
Center for Climate Change Communication at George Mason University and the
lead author of the upcoming study in the Journal of Computer Mediated
Communication.
Highly religious readers, the study revealed, were more likely to see
nanotechnology as risky when exposed to rude comments compared to less
religious readers, Brossard notes.
"Blogs have been a part of the new media landscape for quite some time now,
but our study is the first to look at the potential effects blog comments
have on public perceptions of science," says Brossard.
While the tone of blog comments can have an impact, simple disagreement in
posts can also sway perception: "Overt disagreement adds another layer. It
influences the conversation," she explains.
UW-Madison Life Sciences Communication Professor Dietram Scheufele, another
of the study's co-authors, notes that the Web is a primary destination for
people looking for detailed information and discussion on aspects of
science and technology. Because of that trend, "studies of online media are
becoming increasingly important, but understanding the online information
environment is particularly important for issues of science and
technology."

Read more at:
http://phys.org/news/2013-02-trolls-rude-blog-comments-dim.html#jCp



On Sat, Mar 8, 2014 at 7:08 PM, Kevin O'Malley <kevmol...@gmail.com> wrote:

>  Oh geez, here come the assholes again, jumping on their
> AssholeBandwagon.  Typical of anti-science Luddites, they use tag team
> trolling techniques in their attempts at vigilante censorship.
>

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