Even though I sometimes felt the language to be too bad in here, I generally think it's okay as it's a chat...people are, in general, more prone to stupid in chats.
People who still wanna have fun with the friends they've made here can join our off-topic chatroom we've created elsewhere. This room is staying calm now.
Honestly, I am here to help people, talk with like-minded people and occasionally vent my frustration that I cannot do elsewhere. If I can't do that, because I have to be "professional" all the time, nor can I tell someone they are doing something stupid, then this place would hold no meaning to me anymore.
The point of the slack isn't to split everyone up, but when we have conversations that are gonna get people banned here or cause stupid drama then we might as well have another chatroom where we won't face repercussions
@Darth_Wardy It's worth 2.8bn and makes $30m/yr
Lots of people have a problem that slack solves. Slack ain't cheap, either.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan No, I can't. Can I tell someone they are doing a stupid thing with nice words and glossing it over? No. They won't get it. Similarly, if I vent, I'm not nice. I'm complaining about something and to properly express how much something bothers me, yeah, I'll use curse words.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan that'd still be profanity (stupid) and get you banned or at least the message deleted. Because somebody somewhere could be offended by it. For example a WPF developer
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan f you post something that offends them they have the right to flag that. From be nice: Inappropriate language or attention. Avoid vulgar terms and anything sexually suggestive. Also, this is not a dating site.
@scheien Again, that's irrelevant. There are social contexts. It's not about being liked, it's about setting a social baseline, one that's hardly prudish or overly conservative, for people to adhere too in this social context.
@scheien Because remember that this place isn't just hanging with friends. It's hanging out with strangers too, and with employers and employees, with a wide variety of people, under SO's umbrella.
Saying "this is my place, not theirs, so I can speak as I want" ignores the fact that it isn't, actually, your place. Nor mine.
At the end of the day, and I'm gonna try and end this conversation here, SO has made it very clear that it doesn't matter how we interpret the rules. The rules are no vulgarity, vulgarity can be interpreted differently by different people, and as long as a mod acts against a member under their beliefs relating to vulgarity, they will be backed up by the community of members and moderators.
That leaves you all with one choice and that is to act professionally on SO.
And I appreciate some people don't need or want to leave this chatroom so we're not splitting up, Slack is just a place for the people who have made friends here to have discussions that can't be had here.
@SteffenWinkler Well, the examples brought up in the meta post (I wasn't around for the actual drama itself) were definitely NSFW/NSFL/contained profanity, even by most liberal standards. I don't think the room is usually like that, and maybe freezing was overkill, but that only lasted an hour while things were resovled.
No-one ever banned a user and froze a room just because he wasn't nice and used the word "stupid".
The rules are vague because you can't really make a blacklist of "bad words". But I trust SO's system enough that if a mod goes on a ban-spree for people using "screw" or "stupid", there are enough other mods to put him in his place.
My marvellous window problem is solved... Not only did I need to dock into 2 other monitors (how my usual setup is).. I had to setup the monitors in the correct order to be able to reach my lost window... shieeet