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DeafRead, Community, Censorship and Freedom Of Expression P3: New Aggregator

I have just attended the unveiling of the new “aggregator” Deaf Village, or the new home of Rachel and her friends. I hate to be a spoilsport [that is party pooper], but I am not in the least bit impressed with their response to DeafRead’s “censorship”. Which is what it is.

Sure, they have done something to rectify their complaint, instead of just moaning, and that is a good thing. For that they are to be commended. I’m just not convinced that their response improves on the main issue that continues to plague DeafRead. Only time will tell.

DeafRead’s Achilles Heel continues to be their editorial policy,and Deaf Village doesn’t have one. Now an editorial policy does not have to be onerous, but it does help to have basic guidelines, or Terms Of Service, as to what bloggers can expect upon registering with an aggregator.

Rachel in her post, Welcome to a new home! says:

To be welcomed to Deaf Village, all we ask you is to play by the Golden Rule.

That is all very well, but the question is, “What is this Golden Rule?” It’s not spelt out, and it is left to the reader to workout what it is. But if by the Golden Rule she means, being polite and respectful towards different opinions, then it needs to be spelt out on the aggregator. Furthermore, being polite and respectful need to be defined. Do they mean no swearing, no heated language, what?

One can still display respect without resorting to polite and restrained writing. There is also the issue of respecting alternative methods of emotional expression. I don’t have a problem with swearing, sarcasm, humour, hostility [upon occassion], being blunt, or downright heated. Though this levity does extend to issues such as racism, sexism, homophobia, which are big no no’s in my book.

This also raises the question, “What influence will this have on writing style?” A perfectly valid one, seeing that negative attitudes, for example, can be expressed in more ways than the use of hostile language. But that point is lost on the Deaf Village team. If I were to register with Deaf Village, would it mean that, I [pronounced, "eye"], would have to further modify my writing style to fit in with Rachel and friends ethos of politeness and respect?

That’s not to say, that everyone has to agree with my style, or that they have to read what I write. But to refuse to engage with a piece of writing, or allow a blog onto an aggregator, because it expression does not agree with you, is in itself a form of censorship.

Then there is the question of their categories. At the moment, the categories in Deaf Village are listed according to communication methods. Now the categories may well evolve over time, but as they stand, I find them, what’s a polite term, extremely awkward.

I know what they are trying to achieve [prove] with Deaf Village, and it is highly commendable, but Deaf Pulse, displays the level of diversity that Deaf Village aspires to. Furthermore, the irony, given the problems that DeafRead’s Editorial Policy engenders, DeafRead actually displays more diversity than it’s given credit for.

Though, it is going to be interesting to see how the moderators fare on Deaf Village. Trust me, I will be watching, nah reading, with a jaundiced eye and arched eyebrow!

Further Reading:

Behind The Creation Of Deaf Village
Deaf America Syndrome
DeafRead, Community, Censorship and Freedom Of Expression P2
DeafRead, Community, Censorship and Freedom Of Expression
Deaf Blogging, Deaf Vidblogging, & Deaf RSS Aggregators
Trolls Discover AAD
Trolls Discover AAD: An Addendum.
Problems with DeafRead
An example of how deafread doesn’t cater for an international audience
Is Censorship Acceptable?
DeafRead chooses to remove CI Online from their site!
Deafread, you want full disclosure?!
Deafread.com Silences a Strong Deaf Voice- My Response

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Mommie Dearest Writes: The Saga Of Pot, Kettle, Black!

Continuing to follow the saga of ruined reputations and hurt pride, aka the Saga of The Pot, Kettle, Black!, the vengeful mother weighs in with the prospect of a lawsuit [comment 34 quoted here in full] seeking repatriation of her daughter Rachel’s good name.

DeafPride,

A lawsuit doesn’t have to be about money. I want a retraction and an apology to Rachel. Tayler and the DeafRead editors have engaged in discrimination by booting Rachel’s blog and only Rachel’s blog when there were others before her. Here are three examples:

http://deafkidscanhear.blogspot.com/2008/04/check-out-my-implants.html

and

http://deafkidscanhear.blogspot.com/2008/04/health-fair.html

and

http://samspritzer.com/?page_id=22

The last one even links to the CI manufacturer. I personally have no issue with these blog posts, but, according to Tayler’s so called guidelines, these posts, which came before Rachel’s mention of being a Cochlear volunteer, should have resulted in these bloggers getting booted as well. In addition, Rachel was accused of commercialism, and yet Amy Cohen Efron is allowed to sell her DVD for profit on her blog, and Tayler can push Sprint products. Finally, the DeafRead editors accused Rachel of intentionally deceiving her readers. Why if she wanted to hide and deceive would she have written openly about being a Cochlear volunteer?

So, in this case a lawsuit would be about discrimination, defamation of character and slander, not money. Is it worth the battle? I don’t know for sure. I’m looking into it. I’d rather all the rational and respectful bloggers come on over to the new aggregator and leave DeafRead in its own insular world.
Comment by Melissa — June 6, 2008 @ 9:39 pm [Cochlear Implant Online]

Melissa, I’m an avid follower of IT/ Tech/ Copyright/ Culture issues, especially those resulting in lawsuits and court actions. Many of which are dubious in their intentions, and often showing the perpetrators [instigators of frivilous lawsuits] as being complete asshats. I will tell you now, the only thing a lawsuit is going to achieve, is make Rachel [and you] a laughing stock.

Rachel, Elizabeth and you are honest, I will give you that.

Taylor and the DeafRead team already have egg on their faces. Do you want to exacerbate the situation by calling for a lawsuit? What’s this going to achieve? It certainly won’t restore whatever reputation or good name you think your daughter has.

Let’s talk about discrimination shall we. Where are the pro ASL/ Sign Language links on the Cochlear Implant Online blog? Where are the links to Deaf Culture on the Cochlear Implant Online blog? Where are the links to diversity? To tolerance? To..[one of your other buzz words]?

To maintain your insular viewpoint, you have to discriminate against including pro Deaf Culture/ Sign/ Deaf Identity links. Otherwise you would be diluting your, and it would conflict with your, message and the tone [IDENTITY] of Cochlear Implant Online if you linked to Pro Deaf Culture sites.

At least DeafRead included pro-CI blogs, even if he did the wrong thing by Rachel, whereas Rachel, Elizabeth and you, rarely do that, if ever!

The point that is being missed here, is that Cochlear Implant Online blog is as insular and provincial as DeafRead is. OK, DeafRead are shown as hypocrites for their actions, and but it wouldn’t matter if they were all embracing, you would stick to your modus operandi, and to hell with the rest of us.

At the end of the day DeafRead can do what they like with the aggregator they set up [not that I agree with how they operate it, and there are a few people I know who continue to have issues with it], and that includes being two faced. As much as you can do what you like with Cochlear Implant Online, and that includes being as insular and provincial as the rest of us!

What some saner minds would recommend, is that you set up an alternative aggregator. That would be your best revenge, not a lawsuit to resurrect a reputation that was not there in the first place!

Further Reading:

DeafRead, Community, Censorship and Freedom Of Expression P2
DeafRead, Community, Censorship and Freedom Of Expression
Deaf Blogging, Deaf Vidblogging, & Deaf RSS Aggregators
Trolls Discover AAD
Trolls Discover AAD: An Addendum.
Problems with DeafRead
An example of how deafread doesn’t cater for an international audience
Is Censorship Acceptable?
DeafRead chooses to remove CI Online from their site!
Deafread, you want full disclosure?!
Deafread.com Silences a Strong Deaf Voice- My Response

Sphere: Related Content

DeafRead, Community, Censorship and Freedom Of Expression P2

The issue of Rachel’s blog being “censored” still rankles, that her sister Elizabeth has weighed with in with her own response DIG IT! Personally, I couldn’t care less if the blog Cochlear Implant Online sank without a trace. But that doesn’t resolve the issues at the centre of this whole fracas. With the problems inherent in DeafRead, DeafRead, Community, Censorship and Freedom Of Expression, I guess this was bound to happen sooner or later.

For all the accusations flung at Taylor and DeafRead, it doesn’t absolve the otherside from their own successful experiments in attitude. I find that the rebuttal to Taylor’s action, to be equally one sided.

Elizabeth, I’m not targetting you specifically, but using your post DIG IT!, as a springboard for things that need to be said.

I for one, am quite comfortable mixing with Deafies and deafies. Like you and Rachel, Elizabeth, I can speak, listen, and unlike Rachel, but like you, I can sign. Like you, and your sister, I too don’t take crap. Like you, your sister, your mother, et al, I too want the best for all Deaf and deaf people [not just children, but ALL Deaf and deaf people]. But unlike you, and your sister, and your mother, and the overweening minions who feed on your every word, I can actually see many of the issues for what they are, where they spring from, and why. A little bit of historical knowledge and understanding goes a long way.

Yes, Elizabeth, we know that Cochlear Implant Online is a pro-CI, pro-listening and spoken language blog. Reading it is like listening to a broken record. It’s like a vinyl record with a scratch, that causes the needle to stick in the groove, hereby repeating the same phrase over and over and over again. If you don’t know what a vinyl record is……… But why do I read it? Because I like to be challenged. If I don’t challenge the veracity of my views and perspectives, then I will never know if they have any intrinsic value.

The only thing you have never convinced me of, is how you practice diversity, and how you work towards unity between Deaf and deaf! I’m still trying to find the humanity amongst all those buzz words of CI user, ASL/ CI user, implantee, et al. To be fair, this dehumanisation of Deaf and deaf people, is done by many service providers and organisations working for Deaf and deaf people. Seriously, how can someone happen to be Deaf? Some one is or isn’t!

I would never dehumanise someone with labels such as these. My mate who has an implant, also has a name. When I introduce him to hearing family or friends, I introduce him by name, and let them work out the rest. Ditto for a friend who signs.

But I would never play interpreter for a deafie who can’t or won’t sign and a Deafie who signs but doesn’t speak. As far as I am concerned, if it is communication you want, and bridge building to make things more exciting, then you bloody well knuckle down and do it. If you don’t want to sign, then don’t frigging whinge when you get accused of insularity. I’m not going to play mothers and fathers with a group of petulant princes and princesses, whose sense of entitlement is way out of proportion to their efforts at engagement [overweened egos].

Now let’s talk about that word MILITANT. In the Deaf and deaf context, it’s only ever hurled in one direction, and that is at Deaf people who express themselves in ways not agreeable to you. And in a manner not agreeable to you. Well, it’s about time we reversed the trend, and started calling all you pro-CI, pro-speakers, pro-listeners, pro-aural, pro………….militants. If it walks like a duck, if it quacks like a duck, then it is a duck. Militancy is a positive term, but it has become a put down, used by people who don’t like their boat being rocked. Easier still, a buzz word to denote people who express strident anger, who act without thinking.

Then there’s that other buzzword of yours, pro-listening. Which I consider to be an exercise in irony. Is the focus on listening meant as a focus on perceiving sounds, or for the meanings those sounds carry. Two very different things. Then again, the ability to listen is not confined to sounds alone. It also applies to the realm of the visual. So, if you are pro-listening, how is this exemplified by your blog? How do you take on board an expression of anger [as opposed to bad behaviour]? Are you able to see pass the style, the way the message is conveyed, at what is actually being said? That’s the real skill in listening. [I'm not going to play with semantics here, by discussing the need to hear the sounds et al, in the first place]

After all, hearing people listen all the time, but still don’t get it! If that’s what you aspire to……

Remember, by putting restrictions on how a person may express a point of view, is the same as saying I will listen, but on set terms [usually decided by the person wielding the power]. Which is one of the problems inherent in the DeafRead editorial policy. Now of course, that’s does not mean carte blanche on bad behaviour. Far from it. Having read some of the commentaries you receive on your blog, I too would be tempted to cut them off without recourse. In fact I do. This person At The Rim [among others], will never, ever, be allowed to participate in any of my blogs.

Having said that, dealing with strident anger, all the time, and childish retorts [from both sides] gets wearying. It gets even more wearying, when trying to debate with someone whose position is so partisan, that you wonder why you bother.

I can understand why one who say, “Enough is enough!” And I do agree wholeheartedly with Paula Rosenthal when she says:

“….that readers and commentors need to focus on the issue at hand..[comment number 8, DIG IT!]

Which I find sadly lacking, in both sides. Because argument regarding censoring, is only one aspect of a problem that most have ignored, as long as they were getting their piece of cyberspace. For all the caterwauling about Cochlear Implant Online being censored, not one blog [to my knowledge] commented when I posted, Deaf Blogging, Deaf Vidblogging, & Deaf RSS Aggregators,Trolls Discover AAD, Trolls Discover AAD: An Addendum, and G.O.D. wrote about Problems with DeafRead, and An example of how deafread doesn’t cater for an international audience.

So my charge as I outlined in DeafRead, Community, Censorship and Freedom Of Expression, still stands:

pot + kettle = black X (me, gimme, mine)/wahhhh!

Personally, I find the attitude displayed [or Canine Territorial Marking as the case may be] on Cochlear Implant Online, every a bit arrogant as those Elizabeth and Rachel [and their mother] accuse the “militant deaf” of displaying. Reducing comments, perspectives, et al, to the status of “that’s an interesting viewpoint”, is frigging patronising. With Elizabeth’s admission that she and her sister are basically two little college girls, she puts her foot right in it. I will abstain from baring my fangs here. Mother is there, lurking in the shadows.

But Elizabeth, DARLINK. I have seen it all before. We have all seen it before. It was boring then, and it is boring now.  It was insular then, it is insular now. It was divisive then, it is divisive now. Come on, tell me a joke I haven’t heard before!

When all is said and done, Elizabeth, I am supporting you and your sister’s right to express yourselves. Even thought I think your blog is a waste of cyberspace. But, there is one commentator on your blog that is worth a damn. That saves your blog from being a mere, cheap and amateurish marketing spiel. That commentator goes by the name “Older And Wiser”. The one commentator for whom eating humble pie, just might be worth it!

Further Reading:

DeafRead, Community, Censorship and Freedom Of Expression
Deaf Blogging, Deaf Vidblogging, & Deaf RSS Aggregators
Trolls Discover AAD
Trolls Discover AAD: An Addendum.
Problems with DeafRead
An example of how deafread doesn’t cater for an international audience
Is Censorship Acceptable?
DeafRead chooses to remove CI Online from their site!
Deafread, you want full disclosure?!
Deafread.com Silences a Strong Deaf Voice- My Response

Sphere: Related Content

DeafRead, Community, Censorship and Freedom Of Expression

June 5th, 2008 | 9 Comments | Posted in Communication, Culture, Identity, Media, Politics

I have been wondering why Cochlear Implant Online has been rather quiet of late, and this morning I find out that the blog has been removed from the list of active feeds. While I wouldn’t go as far as praising Rachel for what one of her fans call a reflection of diverse perspective, asserts a choice in deafness with a passion..et al, I do commiserate with her. For the simple reason, that I know what it feels like to ignored and have my voice silenced.

I understand Rachel’s point, and I understand what other bloggers are saying. Unfortunately, with the exception of one or two sane voices, they all are responding with unmitigated fury that doesn’t arguer well for their side. The debate is taking on the same old Deaf versus deaf arguments, which detracts from the issue at hand, and does neither side any favours. I can’t help but think of the algebraic formula:

pot + kettle = black X (me, gimme, mine)/wahhhh!

This is not to say that the DeafRead team is without blame. I’ve had my own disagreements, Trolls Discover AAD, and Trolls Discover AAD: An Addendum. However, the problem is not simply one of censorship. Nor is Rachel the only casualty.

The problem is two fold: the DeafRead editorial policy which is trying to control blogging, and a clash of values of various bloggers as to what DeafRead should be: “As long as I am getting a piece of the pie..” Of which “censorship” is but a side effect.

The over riding impression I get from the deaf clan, is that their interest in DeafRead extends to their own publishing, with no real desire to engage with the Deaf bloggers. Except the mad rush to correct any negative commentaries re: the cochlear implant. Otherwise they stay within the safe confines their own blogs.

This begs the question, where we they when G.O.D. posted Problems with DeafRead and An example of how deafread doesn’t cater for an international audience?

The argument of community is a joke at best. Let’s be honest here, Rachel’s and other deaf and pro implanters, interest in community extends to their proselytizing platform and little else. I have yet to see Rachel respond to posts that show up on DeafRead, in a manner that is not defined by her cochlear implant.

Ben in Open Letter to DR Editors put his finger on what Rachel and others just refuse to acknowledge:

Cochlear Implant section needs to understand that their section did some individuals in the Deaf community wrong. You might be success cases but be aware that we know of people whose CI are failures. They are suffering. It is not wrong of the Deaf community to be angry about that.

Which I agree with. To be fair, neither side engages in, is engaging in, or ever engages in a debate that actually understands the otherside. For all their exhortations, Rachel, her mum, and supporters, are as exteremely partisan as the Deaf they criticise for being.

But as typical of the shortsightness in the difference between Deaf and deaf identities, Ben commits the usual faux pas when he attempts to simplify these differences:

The thing I want to discuss is the sharp divide between two groups: ASL/Cuturally Deaf and Cochlear Implants deaf. The difference is not much, really, to look at–merely a matter of different desires.

If you don’t intend to learn or use sign language, or even participate in the Deaf community, as Rachel [for example] has shown she no intention of doing, then these individual desires are not mere differences. The are different values and perspectives [which you should know by now Ben!]. They become yawning cultural chasms.

Yes, the DeafRead teams has a problem on their hands [even they can't see it]. They need to rethink the whole DeafRead platform, and modify the editorial policy. The  obvious thing to do is ditch  DeafRead  Extra, make DeafRead the main aggregator [unmoderated - except for spam and certain other criteria], make it fully searchable via category, search, and tags. Then set up DeafSide as the cultural wing of us more erudite Deafies.

You can have your cake and eat it too!

Further Reading

Deaf Blogging, Deaf Vidblogging, & Deaf RSS Aggregators
Trolls Discover AAD
Trolls Discover AAD: An Addendum.
Problems with DeafRead
An example of how deafread doesn’t cater for an international audience
Is Censorship Acceptable?
DeafRead chooses to remove CI Online from their site!
Deafread, you want full disclosure?!
Deafread.com Silences a Strong Deaf Voice- My Response

Sphere: Related Content

MEDIA WATCH: Lessons Of Silence

May 31st, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Communication, Media, Media Watch

If I had a dollar, for every time a Hearing person makes the observation that Deaf culture is silent, I would have enough money to take a contract out on all hearing people, and restore peace and prosperity for Deaf people. In fact, I would have more than enough money to buy out the patent rights to the cochlear implant and immediately cease production of the said devices. Instead, we have to be content with being damned with faint praise in articles such as Lessons Of Silence.

“…As I immersed myself in their visual, intensely expressive language, I realized that through their “handicap,” deaf people had developed certain communication skills more thoroughly than most hearing people, which made them uncommonly effective at getting their point across…”

I must admit it does make for a nice change from being called evil, morally repugnant, et al, that pervades hearing discourse about some Deaf issues.

What amazes me, is the amount of knowledge about Deaf people and Deaf culture that a hearing person can glean from surfing a solitary website, Web Sourd a French site that offers online sign language translation services. Then again, I have been able to glean a similar amount of knowledge about hearing people by flushing the toilet and listening intently to the churn as the cistern refills!

Irony moments abound:

“….Thus a radical experiment was born: to work with deaf people as communication consultants for our corporate clients. The idea was not to teach our clients sign language — although some of our deaf trainers remain convinced that such training would resolve many problems — but to help them adopt communication skills from the deaf world that would make them better colleagues and managers…”

This is backhander if there ever was one. We, Deaf people have enough problems trying to live a decent life, with all the access to information and services that hearing people take for granted. When a hearing person comes up with the novel idea of mining Deaf communication skills to show hearing people how to improve theirs, that’s the sound of knuckles scraping the ground and not the eureka moment of two brain cells colliding.

As much as I am proud of my Deafness, Deaf culture and sign language, I hate the pedestal the writer of this article has put us on:

“…When they interact with one another, deaf people act in ways that let them communicate more rapidly and accurately than hearing people…”

As I said, I like irony moments, and this article has them in abundance, in the first two paragraphs of which the following killer line, has been obvious to Deaf and deaf people for quite some time:

“…Some of these behaviors are simple and obvious, but it’s remarkable how often hearing people do the opposite…”

All I can think of when I read this article, is how the hearing world continually denies us, then mines us!

Meanwhile, and I am thinking of setting up a training course teaching people how to lift your knuckles off the ground!

Further Reading:

What The deaf can teach us about listening… | Bruno Kahne

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