
IWanaBeFriendsWithYa wrote:SabrinaB wrote:The oekaki example you mention is just a statement. Its nothing like "how dare you do this? It is for drawing, not writing! Get out of here!"
They have to step in often, they cant sugarcoat everything. Its a simple statement, nothing more :)
I have also had many issues with staff seeming hostile. They aren't means, but blunt and passive aggressive in their warnings.
I personally believe it's a copy and paste warning they use rather than typing it from scratch as they're usually the same so I don't personally blame them but it's always upsetting to see it and gives me the same feeling I get when someone should at me irl. I hate it, I hate doing things wrong and most of the time it's an accident.
For example, you put your age in a forum (I personally mentioned a rough age in the words of "I'm in my hundreds" but my actual age, just using hundreds as an example of how I worded It so it doesn't get deleted lol) I thought the rule was you don't say specific age so thought it was okay. It was deleted which is absolutely fair enough but because its an accident, first time doing it, just a message saying " just so you're aware, you're not allowed to mention anything about age, you're only allowed to say that you're an adult etc, this is just to let you know, if you do happen to do it continuously you could be banned, thank you for considering this message and have a lovely day!"
It's basically the same words as saying " you did this. Do not do it again or you will be banned." But nicer.
If people have continuously broke the same rule on purpose then you have to be stern but 9 tomes out of 10 it's an accident and the majority of people react better to kindness than sterness !!
Saying that, the latest warning I had was when I was defending the staff over the security system and my warning was worded nicer than usual and had a smiley face. Just that alone made me not feel like I was being attacked and informed me of a rule I broke <3
Malleus wrote:I 100% agree to the fact that staff can come off as hostile. There are some staff members who in the past, I've had an amazing experience with ( still crying over the time Vampiric commissioned me ) ! And there are some staff members who I have had an awful experience with. It depends on the staff member. It may even depend on the day.
But staff do tend to come off as blunt and unfriendly. While this may not bother everyone, clearly it affects many users and I don't think their experiences should be erased just because 'oh it doesn't effect ME personally'. Honestly I know I myself can come off as blunt and unfriendly, so when I am messaging people I try to use things like ;w; and other little tone indicators to try and be approachable. And even more so, if someone tells me I came off as aggressive I apologize! And I have not known staff on this website to have a good track record of apologizing for much at all.
Like, there's professionalism and then there's coldness. The amount of people, myself included, on this website that are neurodivergent don't help the way staff is perceived I'm sure. But as someone pointed out, applying to staff was always a choice people made, and if moderating a silly little pet website becomes too stressful due to real life obligations, like they don't need to be staff...? I dunno, man.
Infailia wrote:IWanaBeFriendsWithYa wrote:SabrinaB wrote:The oekaki example you mention is just a statement. Its nothing like "how dare you do this? It is for drawing, not writing! Get out of here!"
They have to step in often, they cant sugarcoat everything. Its a simple statement, nothing more :)
I have also had many issues with staff seeming hostile. They aren't means, but blunt and passive aggressive in their warnings.
I personally believe it's a copy and paste warning they use rather than typing it from scratch as they're usually the same so I don't personally blame them but it's always upsetting to see it and gives me the same feeling I get when someone should at me irl. I hate it, I hate doing things wrong and most of the time it's an accident.
For example, you put your age in a forum (I personally mentioned a rough age in the words of "I'm in my hundreds" but my actual age, just using hundreds as an example of how I worded It so it doesn't get deleted lol) I thought the rule was you don't say specific age so thought it was okay. It was deleted which is absolutely fair enough but because its an accident, first time doing it, just a message saying " just so you're aware, you're not allowed to mention anything about age, you're only allowed to say that you're an adult etc, this is just to let you know, if you do happen to do it continuously you could be banned, thank you for considering this message and have a lovely day!"
It's basically the same words as saying " you did this. Do not do it again or you will be banned." But nicer.
If people have continuously broke the same rule on purpose then you have to be stern but 9 tomes out of 10 it's an accident and the majority of people react better to kindness than sterness !!
Saying that, the latest warning I had was when I was defending the staff over the security system and my warning was worded nicer than usual and had a smiley face. Just that alone made me not feel like I was being attacked and informed me of a rule I broke <3
I've seen a lot of people commenting on how they're unable to tell the tone of staff posts/percieve them as more negative than they're intended, and I just wanted to suggest that perhaps staff should look into using tone tags when posting.
For example (pulling a quote from romeo & cinderella) "the oekaki is for drawing, not writing" could instead be written as "the oekaki is for drawing, not writing /nm /neu". This would help players, especially neuro divergent ones, better understand the intent behind the message and isn't hard to implement.
As it's been stated that a lot of these seem to be copy-pasted and likely from a list given to staff, perhaps the messages themselves should could through an overhaul.
One again, I'll be using the message "the oekaki board is for drawing, not writing". While it's simple and too the point, something along the lines of "hey, just a reminder that the oekaki board is for drawing, not writing" reads a whole lot gentler and still gets the point across quickly.
Adding to that some tone indicators and/or an emoticon like :) or <3, and you've got a message that players would have a really hard time perceiving as cold/mean/hostile/passive aggressive while still maintaining professionalism.
Professionalism and being cold/blunt don't have to be synonymous <3 /pos /gen
JayBae333 wrote:Staff can sometimes sound like robots/monotone & that can come off as unwelcoming for nuerodivergent users or even users with anxiety & other things like that. It costs absolutely nothing to be a bit more gentle when someone breaks the rules & it costs nothing to give verbal warnings rather than suddenly giving someone a strike or whatever - I understand that they've likely seen some of the stuff that breaks the rules many times before but that's no excuse to be rude.
I am autistic and I have had that in my signature for a long time. It is incredibly common for people to bash my communication style because I do not use emojis and I'm not very emotionally demonstrative, and it sucks. I just read through a lot of posts that talked about it. I just want to say I always do my best to be fair and understanding, but I know people see the way I speak as rude and I don't know what to do about it, and it's very possible something I say here will come off that way because I want to say something so people don't insist that they're being ignored.
imaqtpie wrote:-snip- seriously how many kids do you think are interested in the 2000s/10s phpBB forum aesthetic in the zoomer age of tiktok and instant gratification, this site is a relic of a bygone era and the rules should probably lax to reflect that. -snip-
Lanayru wrote:While I agree with the overall point that staff should put more consideration into how they communicate and come across, I wanted to gently nudge up the point that tone tags are unfortunately not an universal fix and do not help everyone. While I appreciate a good /gen, /j or /lh when needed I personally find excessive tone tag usage quite condescending and belittling as a ND individual. I'm also ESL and find it hard to memorize essentially a whole sub-language of tags for every tone, mood and intent - and I've seen multiple other non-native eng speakers echo this sentiment on the internet. ;v;
Lanayru wrote:Infailia wrote: -snip-
I've seen a lot of people commenting on how they're unable to tell the tone of staff posts/percieve them as more negative than they're intended, and I just wanted to suggest that perhaps staff should look into using tone tags when posting.
For example (pulling a quote from romeo & cinderella) "the oekaki is for drawing, not writing" could instead be written as "the oekaki is for drawing, not writing /nm /neu". This would help players, especially neuro divergent ones, better understand the intent behind the message and isn't hard to implement.
As it's been stated that a lot of these seem to be copy-pasted and likely from a list given to staff, perhaps the messages themselves should could through an overhaul.
One again, I'll be using the message "the oekaki board is for drawing, not writing". While it's simple and too the point, something along the lines of "hey, just a reminder that the oekaki board is for drawing, not writing" reads a whole lot gentler and still gets the point across quickly.
Adding to that some tone indicators and/or an emoticon like :) or <3, and you've got a message that players would have a really hard time perceiving as cold/mean/hostile/passive aggressive while still maintaining professionalism.
Professionalism and being cold/blunt don't have to be synonymous <3 /pos /gen
While I agree with the overall point staff should put more consideration into how they communicate and come across, I wanted to gently nudge up the point that tone tags are unfortunately not an universal fix and do not help everyone. While I appreciate a good /gen, /j or /lh when needed I personally find excessive tone tag usage quite condescending and belittling as a ND individual. I'm also ESL and find it hard to memorize essentially a whole sub-language of tags for every tone, mood and intent - and I've seen multiple other non-native eng speakers echo this sentiment on the internet. ;v;
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