After reading some of the responses, I can definitely see why they should be banned.
I have seen discriminatory DNI lists before, including on CS, so it’s great to see these banned. Unfortunately I cleared my history after seeing it so I couldn’t report it.
They could possibly cause arguments, as a DNI list can’t stop every interaction with users people don’t want to see.
On Toyhouse (I know this is a very different environment to CS) a user posted a list of trigger warnings, each one with a graphic, potentially triggering cartoon, when none of this was actually on their profile. While this kind of content wouldn’t be allowed on CS, it demonstrates why DNI lists should be banned. I’ve seen milder versions of this on CS, so it’s great that this has now been banned :)
Although they can protect people from triggering content, I don’t have a lot of time to read them, they increase my anxiety, and can contain potential triggers and unwanted content. I’ve seen huge DNI lists several pages long, and honestly, nobody’s going to read it. A lot of other users have mentioned this too.
They can protect the user themself from potential bullying.
By removing DNI lists, CS can become a safer, less toxic environment. DNI lists feel to exclusionary and everyone should feel included, regardless of whether they like a certain fandom, hoarding pets, or anything else. <3
Although I am mostly against them now, I want to bring up this:
rileypillow wrote:DNI lists are rarely used in this way. They are put by the user to protect themselves and others from harmful or triggering content, not to advertise content or discriminate.
DNI lists can have an important purpose, so maybe if other, less exclusionary things were encouraged (e.g. I don't like x so please don't mention x when interacting rather than don't interact if you like x)?