
On 5 April 2010 12:52, Ross Paterson
Basically http://meatballwiki.org/wiki/RealNameUserAdvantages, especially simplicity, trust and recognizability.
Allow me to respond to some of these points. I find none of them particularly convincing, especially not when compared to the disadvantage that it's holding back contributors to hackage.
Simplicity. It's the simplest thing. You need a name, you use your name.
Disagreed. For those people who consistently use an online pseudonym, the simplest thing is to continue that consistency, rather than remember a list of exceptions who had a real names policy. Moreover it makes things more difficult for everyone else. If someone uses their pseudonym on IRC, on the wiki, on the mailing lists, on their website and so on and so forth, that's how I know them. If I want to find their hackage contributions, now I need to know their real name. Where do I find this information, in general? (I presume this addresses your "recognisability" point as well.)
Trust. If a person doesn't use their RealName, there is a reason for it. There are many possible reasons, most of them mean problems. So the community will not trust people without RealName - except if there is a really credible explanation.
This is an incredible claim. The number of online communities that mandate real names is tiny. This article seems to imply that the vast majority of online communities would be rife with mistrust. This is simply not how the internet works, or has ever worked. The rest of that article is a list of barrel-scraping excuses, e.g., * "Authorship. Being recognized (and honored) as the author." (Why doesn't that apply to a pseudonym?) * "Reputation. Using a RealName is the most credible way to build a combined online and RealLife identity." (Some people don't want this, for whatever reasons.) * ... and so on.
I don't recall anyone else refusing to use their real name, though a number of people have not responded to enquiries I made of them. Of course some may have been put off by the User accounts page.
There was at least one other person in the conversation who mentioned they'd be put off by this policy. A few others chimed in with general support, if not a specific mention of boycott. IMO this policy is hurting the community in much greater weight than any purported advantages. I'd like to see the restriction lifted. -David